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Search resuls for: "Laurie Santos"


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There's a reason you dread looking at the stacked blue, yellow and green blocks on your Google calendar. Feeling too busy, or like you don't have time to do what you want, can lead to "time famine," according to Yale University psychology professor Laurie Santos. Four in five employed U.S. residents feel time-poor, according to a 2018 study. The good news: There are three simple actionable ways to build "time affluence," as Santos calls it, and improve your happiness. We should all think "about time the way we think about money," she said.
Persons: Laurie Santos, Santos Organizations: Yale University, SXSW, Companies Locations: U.S
The key to a "good life" is the ability to learn from your mistakes, according to Barbara Corcoran. "Recovering from failure, in my book, is 95% of life," Corcoran said. "If you're going to have a good life, you'd better be really good at getting back up, like a jack-in-the-box, boom, boom, boom. "They drove me crazy too, but I admired my superstars so much because of that ability ... You could punch them around. "Unfortunately, the only way to really learn is ... by tripping up and making many, many mistakes," said Corcoran.
Persons: Barbara Corcoran, It's, Corcoran, Tim Ferriss, you'd, Ferriss, They'd, Laurie Santos, , she's, Mark Cuban Organizations: Corcoran Group, CNBC, Dallas Mavericks Locations: Yale,
For individuals who are seeking happiness, the answer is pretty simple and may also be of some use to businesses as well. 1 thing people can do to feel happier, Santos says "it would be engaging in social connection." "And my earliest love was ice cream. This prompted Bunn to think about how she could "use ice cream as a tool to bring people together" with a heightened focus on fostering "connection and imagination." So how can businesses similar to the Museum of Ice Cream tap into the happiness booster that is social connection?
Persons: Laurie Santos, Santos, Maryellis Bunn, Bunn, she's Organizations: U.S, CNBC, Museum of, of Locations: United States, Post
There's only one correct answer if you want them to lead happier, more successful lives, says Yale University psychology professor Laurie Santos: "Wait as long as possible." This is likely to encourage poor mental health — in ways that affect kids differently than adults — and distractions in the classroom, Santos says. Social media use exposes many kids to cyberbullying, hate speech and discrimination, Make It reported in May. "These are brains that are forming and trying to pay attention in school [while their phones are going] ding, ding, ding." "They're not going to want to do as you say, they're going to want to do as you do," Santos says.
Persons: Laurie Santos, Santos, Michael Robb, They're Organizations: Yale University, CNBC, Media, Global
You've heard those phrases promoting the idea that success, achievement and happiness are all enabled by a hefty bank account. Don't miss: Hustle culture isn’t dead, it just got a Gen Z rebrand: ‘People want time to live their lives’Working too hard can increase stress, depression and burnout, a Mayo Clinic blog post notes. "We have an intuition [that] I'm going to earn a million dollars, and I'll be happy. "You think, 'I've got to hustle more ... Now I need $5 million to [be happy].' That hustle culture misconception winds up doubling down on itself."
Persons: You've, Laurie Santos, it's, I'm, Santos, That's, I've Organizations: Yale, CNBC, Mayo Clinic, International, of Environmental Research, Public Health
At the time, Santos considered the experience a major failure, but now she credits her public speaking success to those freshman-year jitters. "We need to have much more of a growth mindset about failure." Coined by psychologist Carol Dweck, a growth mindset is when you believe you can always improve and learn more, even when it comes to your greatest strengths. It's her goal for any failure: Learn and grow enough from it that you won't make the same mistake twice. "One of the best ways of doing that — of getting better over time — is to actually experience failure, to experience the consequences of messing up," Santos says.
The key lies in a simple trait that highly successful people share: self-awareness. For Gendler, who studies how insights from ancient scholars can solve modern problems, building the trait involves tapping into your inner Socrates. Start doing the same for any belief you're trying to unlearn. People on the unstable bridge reported that they felt more attracted to the person alongside them. "Imagine having an inner Socrates with you on the bridge," Gendler said.
For most of her teens and 20s, Rachel Turow was her own worst critic. "I felt awkward and lonely and weird," Turow, a Seattle-based clinical psychologist, said on a recent podcast episode of "The Happiness Lab," hosted by Yale University professor Dr. Laurie Santos. It was the epitome of self-criticism — a common affliction, and one that Turow referred to as "the smoking of mental health." Turow, who published a book called "The Self Talk Workout" last year, learned that firsthand. As she trained to become a clinical psychologist, she picked up a set of daily exercises that helped her treat herself more compassionately, she said.
I don’t know where, but people are seeing it. I don’t know what they thought that movie was meant to be marketing-wise, but it was a little gem for us. He basically said, Pay me or I’m going to tell your wife. Let’s do another one.” Ray said, “OK, what do you want me to do differently?” The director said: “I don’t know. I don’t know that there’s any way to communicate that to you.
Mamadi Doumbouya for The New York Times Talk Jerrod Carmichael Was Scared of Coming Out. Anything other than “I’m gay” was me dodging. Everything was actually “I’m gay.” But it’s still dodged. The working title of “Rothaniel” was “I’m Gay.” There are certain phrases that have no substitute. Like “I’m gay” or telling someone “I’m sorry.” But people can live in cognitive dissonance.
Persons: Mamadi Doumbouya, Jerrod Carmichael, , “ I’m, Carmichael, Seth Meyers ”, Howard Stern, , ” Carmichael, , I’ve, You’ve, it’s, I’m, , ’ ’, Dave, Chapelle, ” It’s, Hitler, Martin Luther King, Michael Jackson, ” —, Jay Z, Mozart, Rothko, Jay, It’s, Norm Macdonald, Malcolm X, shouldn’t, Jessica Chastain’s, Bo, Burnham, can’t, Something’s, Seth Meyers ’ ’, Lloyd Bishop, Lizzo, that’s, That’s, She’s, — that’s, Rothaniel, Wesley Morris, Eddie Murphy, you’ve, Eddie, he’s, I’d, You’d, D’Angelo’s, Spalding, Eric Butterworth, Maya Angelou, Oprah Winfrey, Christian, Read Eric Butterworth, David Marchese, Neal Stephenson, Laurie Santos, Christopher Walken Organizations: The New York Times, York’s Whitney Museum of American, HBO, Twitter, NBC, NBCU, Bank, Getty
So when Yale released its happiness class for free online, I decided to give it a try. The 10-week class, called "The Science of Well-Being," is taught by Laurie Santos, a professor of psychology and cognitive science. She starts the class by addressing why the things we want in life don't actually make us happy. Money ≠ happiness. Be more mindful about how you spend moneyLater in the class, Santos interviews Elizabeth Dunn, a happiness researcher and the co-author of "Happy Money."
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