Finding Your Element Quotes

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Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life by Ken Robinson
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Finding Your Element Quotes Showing 1-30 of 50
“Richard Felder is co-developer of the Index of Learning Styles. He suggests that there are eight different learning styles. Active learners absorb material best by applying it in some fashion or explaining it to others. Reflective learners prefer to consider the material before doing anything with it. Sensing learners like learning facts and tend to be good with details. Intuitive learners like to identify the relationships between things and are comfortable with abstract concepts. Visual learners remember best what they see, while verbal learners do better with written and spoken explanations. Sequential learners like to learn by following a process from one logical step to the next, while global learners tend to make cognitive leaps, continuously taking in information until they “get it.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“You create your own life by how you see the world and your place in it;”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“Although mindfulness does not remove the ups and downs of life, it changes how experiences like losing a job, getting a divorce, struggling at home or at school, births, marriages, illnesses, death and dying influence you and how you influence the experience. . . . In other words, mindfulness changes your relationship to life.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“If you are considering earning your living from your Element, it’s important to bear in mind that you not only have to love what you do; you should also enjoy the culture and the tribes that go with it.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“Outside of school, though, we were often defined by our disabilities. We were “handicapped”—a bit like a species. Often when people have a disability, it’s the disability that other people see rather than all the other abilities that coexist with their particular difficulty. It’s why we talk about people being “disabled” rather than “having a disability.” One of the reasons that people are branded by their disability is that the dominant conception of ability is so narrow. But the limitations of this conception affect everyone in education, not just those with “special needs.” These days, anyone whose real strengths lie outside the restricted field of academic work can find being at school a dispiriting experience and emerge from it wondering if they have any significant aptitudes at all.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“Ultimately, the two most important questions to ask yourself in the search for your passion are: what do you love, and what do you love about it?”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“Whatever your aptitudes, the greatest source of achievement is passion. Aptitude matters, but passion often matters more… If you love doing something, you’ll be constantly drawn to get better at it.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“My life, like yours, is a constant process of improvisation between my interests and personality on the one hand and circumstances and opportunities on the other.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“When you’re in your Element, your sense of time changes. If you’re doing something that you love, an hour can feel like five minutes; if you are doing something that you do not, five minutes can feel like an hour.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“As Joseph Campbell says, if you move in the direction of your passions, opportunities tend to appear that you couldn’t have imagined and that weren’t otherwise there.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“Shakespeare’s Hamlet: “There is nothing either good or bad but thinking makes it so.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“Many of the opportunities you have in your life are generated by the energy you create around you.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“The reason that neither he nor I could predict my life, any more than you can predict yours, is that life is not linear; it is organic.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“This is true of your own life. If you open yourself to new experiences, the odds improve exponentially of one of those experiences changing your world in a profoundly positive”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“When you add the noise of the external world to all the roles you take in it, it is easy to lose sight of who you really are. To find your Element, you need to regain that perspective. One way is to create time and space to be alone with yourself, to experience who you are when no one else wants anything from you and the noise has stopped. One method is to meditate.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“The quest for your Element is really a two-way journey. It is an inward journey to explore what lies within you; it is an outward journey to explore opportunities in the world around you.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“I say, follow your bliss and don’t be afraid, and doors will open where you didn’t know they were going to be.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“find your Element you may have to challenge your own beliefs about yourself. Whatever age you are, you’ve almost certainly developed an inner story about what you can do and what you can’t do; what you’re good at and what you’re not good at. You may be right, of course. But for all the reasons we’ve discussed, you may be misleading yourself. Part of making sense of where you are now is to understand how you got here. So if you do doubt your aptitudes in certain areas, think about how these doubts were first formed. Are there other ways of developing them that you’d”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“Mastering any discipline takes time and effort. If you're on the right path, much of the pleasure is in the process. You should be inspired by those who are further down the road than you are, not discouraged by how far you have to go. If you love what you do, you should enjoy the journey of improvement and not be frustrated by having to make it.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“Weil argues that emotional well-being is just as important as physical well-being and that we need to create the conditions that allow us to be happy through circumstances within our control. “Happiness arises spontaneously from sources within us,” he says. “Seeking it outside ourselves is counterproductive.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“All kinds of experiences can make you feel good for a time: your favorite food, chocolate, partying, a great book, music that you love, watching your favorite baseball team win a game or having an intimate evening with your lover. You can make your own list. But when the hormones subside and the morning breaks, you may still feel as unfulfilled deep down as you did before the party started. You may be happy for a time, but sustained happiness depends on having a deeper sense of fulfillment.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“Si quieres ser realmente creativo, añade, «no deberías centrarte solo en tu talento, y decidir que no puedes hacer nada creativo en determinado ámbito porque ves a otras personas con más talento que tú.» Necesitas tener aptitudes para lo que haces, pero la auténtica diferencia viene marcada por la pasión. Después de todo, como dice Amabile: «Hay mucha gente con un talento increíble que nunca consigue nada». Por cierto, puedes ser mejor de lo que crees en lo que realmente te gusta.”
Ken Robinson, Encuentra tu elemento
“Aun así, la ciencia no ha llegado a un acuerdo general sobre la naturaleza de la conciencia y qué es exactamente lo que nos hace ser como somos. No explica las cualidades del ser humano, el placer que sentimos ante la música, la poesía o el baile, nuestra pasión por crear bellos objetos y elaboradas teorías, o la desbordante euforia del primer amor. Tampoco las múltiples formas de vincularnos con el espíritu de los demás.”
Ken Robinson, Encuentra tu elemento
“Las habilidades suelen requerir una dosis considerable de educación y aprendizaje para poder desarrollarse. La tendencia natural no supone en absoluto que uno tenga que convertirse en un experto.”
Ken Robinson, Encuentra tu elemento
“interiores de otras personas, ver a través de sus ojos y sentir lo mismo que ellos. Podemos ser empáticos. Podemos anticipar el futuro e intentar hacerlo realidad. Estos poderes, la retrospección, la empatía y la premonición, se encuentran entre nuestros mejores recursos para dar forma una y otra vez a nuestras vidas.”
Ken Robinson, Encuentra tu elemento
“Dada la facilidad con la que nos distraemos, unos simples minutos cada día pueden ser un poderoso medio de reconectar con nosotros mismos, fortaleciendo la conciencia de quiénes somos bajo la superficie. Como la mayoría de las cosas que merece la pena hacer, no es fácil, pero siempre nos espera una recompensa.”
Ken Robinson, Encuentra tu elemento
“Vivimos en una época de profundos «ruidos» y distracciones. El mundo es cada vez más turbulento. Es difícil sobreponerse al impacto que las tecnologías digitales ejercen sobre nuestra manera de pensar, vivir y trabajar. Sus beneficios son extraordinarios, pero también hay desventajas.”
Ken Robinson, Encuentra tu elemento
“It can be just as helpful to focus on the immediate next steps. Beginning the journey, and being willing to explore various pathways, can be as productive as setting out with a final destination in mind.”
Ken Robinson, Finding Your Element: How to Discover Your Talents and Passions and Transform Your Life
“¿Qué es una tribu? Para lo que nos ocupa, una tribu es un grupo de personas que comparten los mismos intereses y pasiones. Una tribu puede ser grande o pequeña, puede existir virtualmente, en forma de red social o en persona. Las tribus pueden ser muy diversas, y extenderse entre culturas y generaciones. Pueden atravesar el tiempo e incluir a gente que ya no está con vida pero cuyo legado sigue siendo fuente de inspiración. Puedes pertenecer a varias tribus a la vez o en diversas etapas de tu vida. Lo que las define son sus pasiones compartidas.”
Ken Robinson, Encuentra tu elemento
“La pasión tiene que ver con todo aquello que alimenta la energía espiritual, en lugar de consumirla.”
Ken Robinson, Encuentra tu elemento

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