The Golden Rule finds no limit of application in business.
Learn to accept your limits and you'll become a happier person.
Assert your right to make a few mistakes. If people can't accept your imperfections, that's their fault.
You feel the way you do right now because of the thoughts you are thinking at this moment.
The biggest mistake you can make in trying to talk convincingly is to put your highest priority on expressing your ideas and feelings. What most people really want is to be listened to, respected, and understood. The moment people see that they are being understood, they become more motivated to understand your point of view.
Surprisingly, it's forgiveness, not guilt, that increases accountability. Researchers have found that taking a self-compassionate point of view on a personal failure makes people more likely to take personal responsibility for the failure than when they take a self-critical point of view. They also are more willing to receive feedback and advice from others, and more likely to learn from the experience.
After all, this is how you learned how to walk. You didn't just jump up from your crib one day and waltz gracefully across the room. You stumbled and fell on your face and got up and tried again. At what age are you suddenly expected to know everything and never make any more mistakes? If you can love and respect yourself in failure, worlds of adventure and new experiences will open up before you, and your fears will vanish.
I fight terrorism as if there was no peace process, and I negotiate the peace process as if there was no terrorism.
Your recipe, darling, is so tasty, and you sure can stir your pot.
I could fully express myself in lacrosse.
If I can finish a cartoon in 20 minutes, then that's the ideal editorial cartoon - it's to the point.