A couple of years ago I was running sprints on a Sunday morning on one of the intramural fields behind the gym at the University of Miami. All of a sudden, a car pulled up and a middle-aged woman got out and started running around with her eyes glued to her cell phone.
You go into work one day and sitting in the break room is a box of twelve donuts. Twelve people each take one donut, including me who takes the last one, yet there is still one donut left in the box? How can that be???? The answer?? A little later on in this blog post
Sometimes, we need to learn things the hard way! We all make mistakes in life, that is how we learn and how we grow – the key is not making the same mistakes twice. Let me take you back to something that happened to me back in 2011.
I’m going to introduce you to two people that have something in common. The first is a woman who was an aspiring writer who had recently been divorced and living on government aid. In fact, she was so poor that she couldn’t afford a typewriter.
This week’s video is about systems thinking. First, let me define systems thinking. Systems thinking is a way of thinking that focuses on the welfare of the entire system, not the benefits to the component parts of the system.