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Despite tremendous progress in HR… why is disengagement still so prevalent?
If HR has evolved… if systems have improved… if language has modernized… then why does disengagement still feel so deeply embedded in the modern workplace? We’ve upgraded platforms. We’ve introduced engagement surveys, pulse checks, learning portals, wellbeing initiatives. We’ve invested in better tools, better frameworks, better intentions. And yet… disengagement remains stubbornly, almost universally high.…
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What Happens When Nostalgia Masquerades as Wisdom?
Nostalgia is seductive. It feels warm. Familiar. Safe. It wraps itself in memory and tells a comforting story about who we used to be, what once worked, and how things should feel again if we could just get back there. But nostalgia is not neutral.And it is definitely not strategy. In business, nostalgia often masquerades…
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Hopelessness thrives on clutter… start throwing out its snacks.
Hopelessness isn’t dramatic. It doesn’t usually arrive with despair or collapse. It shows up when everything feels heavy, noisy, and vaguely unmanageable. When your space is crowded. When your mind is juggling too much. When nothing feels finished and everything feels urgent. That’s why clutter is such fertile ground for it. Clutter is not neutral.…
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It’s OK to Play
There’s a lie many of us absorb early and carry quietly into adulthood: That seriousness equals depth.That productivity equals worth. And when life becomes heavy, play must step aside until things feel “better.” Grief dismantles that lie. Grief doesn’t ask you to become more disciplined or more efficient. It asks you to become more present.…
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How Do You Design Your Day?
Most people design their day around habits they’ve been told are “good.” Be disciplined about all of it! And when it doesn’t work, they assume the problem is them. But what if the issue isn’t discipline at all? What if it’s design? Over time, I’ve learned that people don’t fail at productivity. They fail at…
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Don’t be Deterred by the Roughness of the Road
The language of roads and journeys runs through some of the oldest reflections on purpose and leadership. Not as a metaphor for movement alone, but as a way of naming commitment over time. A road implies direction, endurance, and a destination that exists whether the traveler feels confident or not. When Paul, an early Christian…
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Know Yourself Before it’s Impossibly Late
Most people believe they know themselves, and that confidence is rarely questioned. It feels reasonable to assume that living inside your own mind grants you privileged access to who you are, yet psychological research and lived experience both suggest otherwise. Self-knowledge is not a natural byproduct of adulthood. It is a discipline, and one that…
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Before you could bend or break, you need to first know the rules
The phrase “know the rules before you bend or break them” is a popular piece of advice often attributed to artist Pablo Picasso, who said: Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist This phrase isn’t an invitation to rebellion for rebellion’s sake. It’s a reminder that real innovation is born…
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Some Things Are Worth Rushing. Others Should Move Caterpillar Slow
I was watching Landman. If you haven’t seen it, it’s a grounded, character-driven series set in the oil fields of West Texas. Less spectacle, more consequence. A show about work, power, family, and the long shadows decisions cast over time. The drama doesn’t come from twists. It comes from what people live with. In one…
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You Must Make Room First…If You Want to Grow
I’ve come to understand that decluttering a home and pruning a plant are guided by the same underlying principle: growth doesn’t begin with adding more, it begins with removing what no longer supports life. This is something I’ve returned to many times over the years, not as a lifestyle philosophy or a reset ritual, but…

