Brain Tips Archive
Intro Text
Click on the below links to read our Brain Tips Archives:
- Brain Tip #97: Stop Praising the Differences in Men and Women
- Brain Tip #96: Are Diversity Programs Healthy? I Found A Better Way to Connect
- Brain Tip #95: Bring Back Hope by Asking For Help
- Brain Tip #94: Do You Have the Courage to Be Optimistic?
- Brain Tip #93: The Impending Female Brain Drain
- Brain Tip #92: How to Make Your Life Story a Blockbuster
- Brain Tip #91: Faceless Civility: How to Get Along Online
- Brain Tip #90: Who Will Save the Day?
- Brain Tip #89: The Business of Betrayal
- Brain Tip #88: What Does it Take to Get People to Follow You?
- Brain Tip #87: What Are You Committed To?
- Brain Tip #86: How to Use Worrying to Your Advantage
- Brain Tip #85: Bounty of Brain Tips
- Brain Tip #84: A Healthy Supply of Energy is Needed for Success
- Brain Tip #83: The Secret to Accessing Your Brilliance
- Brain Tip #82: Is Your Environment Helping You Think?
- Brain Tip #81: 3 Ways to Change Channels in Your Brain
- Brain Tip #80: Go on a Passion Quest
- Brain Tip #79: The Workplace as Social Media
- Brain Tip #78: How to Become Someone Else
- Brain Tip #77: Resetting Your Brain for 2009
- Brain Tip #76: We Are Family
- Brain Tip #75: What's Your Company's Attitude?
- Brain Tip #73: Oh Brain, Where Art Thou?
- Brain Tip #72: Cure for Economic Woes
- Brain Tip #71: It's not reality; it's only your brain
- Brain Tip #70: Creativity to the Rescue
- Brain Tip #69: Death to the Hierarchy
- Brain Tip #68: Hope for our Future
- Brain Tip #67: When It’s Better to Receive than to Give
- Brain Tip #66: Burden of Greatness Revisited
- Brain Tip #65: Why People Don’t Hear You
- Brain Tip #64: Brighten Up the Mood Ring of Your Team
- Brain Tip #63: The Bourne Mentality
- Brain Tip #62: Are you lonely?
- Brain Tip #60: Snap or Nap Judgments
- Brain Tip #59: Creating The AHA moment
- Brain Tip #58: Why Practice Can’t Make Perfect
- Brain Tip #57: From Black and White to Shades of Gray
- Brain Tip #56: Plump up your brain
- Brain Tip #55: What Were You Thinking? Why The Brain Makes Poor Choices, and How to “Smarten It Up”
- Brain Tip #54: It's A Great Time to Be Someone Else
- Brain Tip #53: How to Read Someone’s Mind
- Brain Tip #52: Working Late Makes You Stupid
- Brain Tip #51: Even Managers Sing the Blues About Change
- Brain Tip #50: This is Your Brain on Unfairness
- Brain Tip #49: Focusing is Dangerous to Your Health and Relationships
- Brain Tip #48: Nourishing the Creative Brain
- Brain Tip #47: Do Men and Women Worry Differently?
- Brain Tip #46: Balance Safety with Challenge for Success
- Brain Tip #45: Use Daydreaming to Improve Your Communication Skills
- Brain Tip #43: A New Diet for Your Mind
- Brain Tip #42: Are We Cultivating a Culture of Cretins?
- Brain Tip #41: Getting Help to See the Light
- Brain Tip #40: Negotiate the Source Not the Symbol
- Brain Tip #39: Why You Should Care About Anger Management
- Brain Tip #37: Body Building for Your Brain
- Brain Tip #36: Will Your Brain to Work Faster and Smarter
- Brain Tip #35: Complain Your Way to Better Relationships
- Brain Tip #34: Toxic Alert! You May Be Poisoning Yourself At This Very Moment
- Brain Tip #33: New Years Evolutions
- Brain Tip #32: How to Make a Logical Decision
- Brain Tip #31: The Clues for Growth Are in the Complaints
- Brain Tip #30: How to Be a Powerful Leader
- Brain Tip #29: The Power of Expectations
- Brain Tip #28: You Have to Let Go to Move Forward
- Brain Tip #27: Stress is a Human Invention
- Brain Tip #26: Let’s Start an Emotional Revolution
- Brain Tip #25: Celebrate, Don’t Suffocate, Your Success
- Brain Tip #24: A Prescription for Plain
- Brain Tip #23: The Burden of Greatness
- Brain Tip #22: Are You Conscious?
- Brain Tip #21: The Truth About Changing Attitudes
- Brain Tip #20: The Lost Art of Connection
- Brain Tip #19: The Top 6 Ways You Can Drain Your Energy At Work....And How You Can Choose to Stay Living While You’re Alive
- Brain Tip #18: Just Say No to Techno
- Brain Tip #17: Doing a Job versus Creating a Life
- Brain Tip #16: How to Get High
- Brain Tip #15: The Top 3 Sources of Communication Breakdowns
- Brain Tip #14: Mind Over Body
- Brain Tip #13: Getting Beyond Illusion
- Brain Tip #12: Staying Up in Down Times
- Brain Tip #11: Brain Calisthenics for Staying Young
- Brain Tip #10: Feelings vs Emotions
- Brain Tip #9: Who Will You Be?
- Brain Tip #8: Increase Your Intuition
- Brain Tip #7: Play the Ball In Front Of You
- Brain Tip #6: Men and Women ARE Different
- Brain Tip #5: When Being Smart Isn't Smart
- Brain Tip #4: You Can’t Do Everything
- Brain Tip #3: Rid the Fear In Order To Hear
- Brain Tip #2: Train Your Brain to Be Smarter
- Brain Tip #1: Seek to Create, Not to Avoid
Brain Tip #74: A Crisis is a Terrible Thing to Waste
Plain Content
I have been in Panama for the past two weeks. It is strange watching what is going on the U.S. and the world so far away from my home. It’s not that I’m concerned about losing my assets. At times like this, I most miss hugs with my loved ones and huddles with my friends.
I recently heard a minister on the radio talking about the state of the world. He said we were not just facing a financial crisis; we are also facing a spiritual crisis. Somehow the values of freedom and democracy had been blown out of proportion, overshadowing our values of community and the common good. Individualism bred selfishness and short-termism, leaving us drowning in a sea of greed.
So how does the brain play into this? If humans are basically social animals, wouldn’t most of us put “good before greed?”
Unfortunately, before the social brain is activated, all perception travels first through the primitive brain. We react to threat and reward. We must first protect ourselves, our livelihood and our families (reflected in the panic on Wall Street). And when we feel safe, we seek what makes us feel good.
THE SITUATION: When money became the major form of wealth for everyone, it served to divide instead of connect us. When we elevated individual gain and free markets to a higher moral status than community responsibility, we branded ourselves as “rugged individualists” and played into a philosophy that states, “The driving force of business is to make as much money as possible for the owners/shareholders.” This is the credo for most of our corporations. It is what suffocates the spirit and drains the creativity of our workers. And I believe it is the reason Wall Street is crashing. At the core of our economic crisis is a spiritual crisis that began at least one hundred years ago.
I am not a socialist. I am a person who deeply loves the country that took in my grandparents as immigrants and provided them the opportunities to start and grow a business and a family. Yet when I watch people screaming at Senator McCain for not crushing "the morons" (democrats) and both parties hating and distrusting the other, I’m saddened by what we have become. This is way too tribal and primal for the most progressive country in the world (or so I thought). I am missing my hugs even more.
So now, in addition to the pollution, hazardous waste and global climate change problems, we have burdened future generations with our financial sins (and bailouts and rescue plans). As taxpayers and workers, what can we do? Where do we go from here?
THE TRUTH: Gerald M. Weinberg said, “Crisis indicates the end of an illusion.” We are now seeing the illusions behind our money, the free market place, and rugged individualism.
THE POSSIBILITY: Instead of fear and depression, maybe we should feel hope for the return of community, public service and good intent. Maybe we can begin to see love and peace as the real wealth of nations, and that we can be educated, healthy citizens that live comfortably in productive eco-systems on our planet. Is this an illusion too? I hope not.
BRAIN TIP: Fortunately, a crisis is a terrible thing to waste! Our brains love status quo so much, that it generally takes a crisis to make the changes we sensed we needed to make long ago (Gary Hamel said, "A turnaround is a transformation past due."). Crisis can drive the emergence of new ideas, structures and ways of being with each other. Yet we are the ones that must create this; we shouldn’t be waiting for our governments to mold our world.
As humans, we have the ability to vision our future. We can quiet our primal, reactionary brain if we choose. We can imagine our future together, and then work together to create it, one community, one business, one family at a time.
What would you like to see rise from the ashes of this meltdown? Please email what your vision of a new world could be. I would love for the readers of my Brain Tips to be the leaders of the blossoming New World.
