Angus Reid, a former pro football player who now speaks and writes about personal and professional success, stresses the importance separating the mistake from the person and forgoing the tendency to assign blame.
Coming Out of the Psychedelic Closet: Lifting the Negative Stigma around Plant Medicines
With the legalization of cannabis in Canada just weeks away, there is a growing interest and awareness surrounding the many benefits and uses of this and other plant medicines.
Are powerful plant and fungi medicines such as cannabis, ayahuasca, ibogaine, and psilocybin becoming less stigmatized as a result?
3 Ways to Improve Your Public Speaking Skills with Renee Jacobs
What's Behind the Modern Depression Epidemic?
How to Beat the City Blues With Nature
But the city does present some other unique challenges to our health and sanity. How often, for example, when walking down a busy city street, do you hear someone else venting loudly on their cell phone? Is it really healthy to be surrounded by others' stress? Or what about the wailing of sirens? Or the sound of airplanes overhead?
How to Create Like Picasso and Hemingway
A Proven Path to Purpose
The Subtle Art of Freezing For Health
We are Homo Sapiens, a (somewhat) hairless ape, and we've been 'anatomically modern' for about 200,000 years. Our ancestors had to rely on their innate biology to survive. When it was cold in the winter they had huts, open fires, and animal furs to keep warm. They didn't have climate control that would keep them in the same temperature 365 days per year. This is comfort is now causing health problems.
The Greatest Basketball Coach of All-Time (and Non-Attachment)
You might not expect to find much wisdom in the obsessed world of college basketball. Many of us think of false machismo, and even a propensity to cheat and put aside long-term health. The pursuit of victory trumps everything, or so we imagine. But former UCLA Coach John Wooden is the source of some of the most remarkable insights. He even practiced an almost Buddhistic non-attachment. Of course, he loved to win and wanted to win. But Wooden created a unique definition for winning. And he remained loyal to it even under the immense pressure of his job.
How We Create False and True Beliefs
As anyone who floats, meditates, or practices yoga knows, our perception apparatus is imperfect. While it seems like we directly perceive reality, the truth is that we have second-hand perception (at best). This allows room for much error.
There is objective truth. But we only see tiny slices of it. Then we layer on complexities like our personal story and our emotions. Our initial limitations combined with the complexity we add means that our sense-making systems often fail to provide accurate pictures of reality.

 
                                
                               
                                
                               
                                
                               
                                
                               
                                
                              









 
            