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It is easy to walk through life feeling not good enough. In American culture in particular, people often look to external factors like a salary or material possessions to dictate their status or worth. The problem is, looking for validation outside of yourself "is a slippery slope and it is a bottomless pit," she says. You "will never feel good enough because there will always be something else" to achieve, another goal post to reach. When Hogi, whose book "How to Find True Love" hits shelves in April 2025, sees her clients struggling with self-worth, she suggests an exercise that helps them reframe.
Persons: Francesca Hogi, Hogi
Whether at your place of work or in your personal life, relationships can be tough to build — but some have a knack for it. "The way that highly successful people build relationships is really not taking your relationships for granted," life coach Francesca Hogi told CNBC Make It at the Fast Company Innovation Festival. Another thing successful people do is develop a sense of self-awareness about how they interact with other people. "I think of it as doing an audit" of relationships, says Hogi. On the flip side, "maybe I'm good at showing up at a time of crisis," adds Hogi, "and that's great, but maybe I'm not as engaged when things are going well."
Persons: Francesca Hogi Organizations: CNBC, Fast, Innovation
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