The Two Way Street of Speech
The rather uncomfortable and awkward truth for some people is that to practice free speech you also have to tolerate free speech. It's not a one-way street.
Help!
To quote my co-author of Lifestorming, Marshall Goldsmith: If you've tried for months to get something done and you haven't been able to, you need help. There's no evidence or reasonable expectation that you're suddenly going to be successful now. Asking for
Assurance
I'm in the doctor's examining room for a scheduled checkup and my eyes wander to the safe needle disposal system you see on every wall. The instructions say, "Lift panel to assure disposal." Minor detail, perhaps, but the word should
Grace
It's important to be a gracious loser, but it's critical to be a gracious winner.
What’s That Sound?
If all you do is boast of your successes and never share your failures I'm not very interested in your successes. I call these "drive-by brags." Someone you rarely hear from zooms in, tells you their latest great feat, and
The Emmys (AKA Self-Aggrandizement)
I waited for a day before writing about the Emmy Awards on Monday evening. They generated the lowest ratings in the history of the event. I didn't want to be rash. But
Episode 16: No, You Can’t
"Some lessons in why your telling yourself you can might wind up in finding out why you can't." Transcript: Welcome to The Uncomfortable Truth and the uncomfortable truth today is, "No, you can't." That's right, no, you can't. Remember Sammy Davis Jr.?
Alan Weiss’s Monday Morning Memo® – 09/18/17
I believe there's an inverse proportion between profanity and vocabulary. The more of the former, the less of the latter. I understand "shock" potential, but I don't understand vulgarity that's completely gratuitous and adds nothing to the point. Routinely, I unfriend
You May Be Wrong, But You’re Also Annoying
I asked a woman at a pro bono speech I was making what kind of value she provided. She stammered and then said something uninteresting. I suggested some ways to change her approach and mentioned four elements. "Oh, I don't agree