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Lexi Radcliffe-Hart posted a new activity comment
• 3 years agoOo that’s such a good question, Darren – and I do hope to see you on the course/at a Catapult Connect call soon. In the meantime, I know that Nicola Twiston Davies Duncan Dalzel-Job Alex Pitt Mitch Bradford Saira Chaudry Pete Domican Ginnie Dallard Frederick Leuschner grace olson-davidson Adarsh Nalam Eike Post Rebecca Beck Caroline Marsh Nrinder Janis Chan Caoimhe Kelly Anastasia Trifonoff Kevin Withane will be able to add to this conversation with their experiences!
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Fiona Chorlton-Voong
posted a new activity comment
• 3 years agoI know some of my friends in the community will love this article Alex Pitt Nicola Twiston Davies Caoimhe Kelly Mike Richardson Joan Langley James Bebbington Silvia Janska Shalaka Laxman Duncan Dalzel-Job Zarir 'Zed' Vakil Faris Aranki Lexi Radcliffe-Hart Rebecca Beck Maria Evans PhD Bryony Ireland Rob Wright Pete Domican Aušrinė Keršanskaitė Saira Chaudry Carolin Greiner Tina Orlando Vic Mistry Lara Hayward Janis Chan
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Lovely article and interesting read; many of these techniques I teach my clients in so it’s great to have them validated. It all begins with a conversation and it doesn’t matter how you start it…
I think I’m going to look up Georgie
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She’ll be lucky to receive one of your voice notes Faris Aranki!
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Loved this, thank you for sharing! I really like the idea of breaking away from the script and I just asked my friend how he would rate his day out of 10 (he said 8) 🙂
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Yes! Breaking away from the traditional script that doesn’t require people to think too much is a way more interesting conversation. I spoke to a child psychologist recently (actually was one of my strangers) and she was telling me that as adults we should use the same approach we use to communicate to children. Take the generalisation away from our questions and be much more specific and intentional. If you want a specific answer…ask a specific question. I’ll practice this on you at our l…
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Ella Bernie posted a new activity comment
What would you guys like to read next?
Tshilidzi Siphuma, Nicola Andrews, Ray Goodier, Jenny Ives, Kelly Cuesta, Jake B, Anna Ogrodzka, Dilly Attygalle, Gavin Johnston, Joan Langley, Nuno Silva, Rebecca Beck, Shival Nagpaul, Gabriel Benatov, Alex Birtles, Sarah Speake, JaRoy Buffong, Caoimhe Kelly, Darren Armitage, Vic Mistry, Jade Phillips, Paulina Połońska, Rob Ridley, Duncan Dalzel-Job, Annelise Lepage, Nika Talbot, Margot Zwiefka, Nicola MacPhail, Dan Hallett, Janis Chan, Regina Dundelova, Julia Maximovskaya, Tim OBrien, Chris John, Anthony Main, Matt Sutton, Kay Dawson, Ed Shrager
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I’ve got 4 Thousand Weeks on my bookshelf and could use a push to get started 🙂
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Ella Bernie posted a new activity comment
Would love to know what you’re most interested in – Pete Domican, Kai-Erik Sunell, Duncan Dalzel-Job, Adarsh Nalam, Caoimhe Kelly, Zarir 'Zed' Vakil, Ilaria Vilkelis, Alex Pitt, James Bebbington, Toni Mitchell, Hermeet Gill, Rob Wright, Ritik Bansal, Ian Bessarabia, Silvia Janska, Roshana Arasaratnam, Damien, Kevin Withane, Eike Post, Roland Szabo, Mike Richardson, Tracey Rob Perera, Nicola Twiston Davies, Janis Chan, Rebecca Beck, Ellie Albadvi, Will Greig
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Lexi Radcliffe-Hart posted in the group The Collective Shelf
So we’re a month away from the next Collective Shelf discussion session – this time focusing on Unchartered by Margaret Heffernan.
How are we all finding this book so far? Personally, I’m taking it slowly and savouring the points it makes. So far, my favourite bit has been the points raised on memory in Chapter 2. The idea that our unreliable memories don’t need to be a negative, instead can be seen to help us be more creative and flexible is an interesting one to explore and I’m looking forward to seeing how that plays out during the rest of the book!
This time around I’m listening to/reading it via Audible and then recapping using the paperback. It’s been helpful to keep me more focused on the ideas being raised and elaborate in my notes about how I think the points could help myself and the wider community.
So how have you found it so far? And how are you reading it?
Ray Goodier, Jenny Ives, Kelly Cuesta, Jake B, Anna Ogrodzka, Dilly Attygalle, @gavi…
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I’m about 1/3 way through. I think some of the points are really interesting e.g. using history as a predictor of future behaviour but it’s not really coming together as a book yet. It seems to make half a point and then move onto something else.
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I totally get that, Pete. I’m hoping that it’ll be more of a case of first third is putting the ideas out there, second third is connecting them to how we move forward, and last third on how it can power change proactively…let’s see!
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Hey everyone!
I’m just into Part 2: ’What would you do if you were free’
It’s been a decent read so far, lots of ideas thrown around! Many of these I am agreeable on, but some a little bifurcating.
One example I’m pondering is the Automation paradox (GPS vs Maps) which is true, but what relevance does that have in 2022?
I’m enjoying it greatly, the world is indeed infinitely more complex than we give it credit for, and we should proceed with cur…
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Thank you for this take on it, Jake – it’s really interesting to use these books to not only question what we’re creating our careers but also in the wider world. The discussion this month will be excellent, I know.
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I’m finally into it and enjoying the theme of how misleading it is to simplify forecasting. It brings together some really interesting concepts although I agree it hasn’t started to tie them together yet
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How funny, I came on today to drop a note and see if I can book in some coffee chats with the TPC community. Meant to be!