By Psychology Today
Understanding strategies such as maximizing vs. satisficing, fast versus slow thinking, and factors such as risk tolerance and choice overload, can lead to better outcomes.
Read on www.psychologytoday.com
CLEAR ALL
Our brains are hard-wired to make poor choices about harm prevention in today's world. But we can fight it.
1
Iyanla Vanzant has four suggestions to help you make up your mind.
Have no fear. An emerging science can now help you choose.
We spend too much time making kids memorize facts instead of giving them the skill that will help them throughout their lives.
2
When uncertain or afraid, how do we free ourselves from delay, make good decisions, and take decisive action? Brendon Burchard offers three strategies.
Intuition offers a direct line to your life force, and also, as I experience it, to a divine intelligence. We can't afford to remain deaf to intuition's messages. Its expertise is energy; its job is to know every nuance of what makes you tick.
Through the practice of yoga, you can learn to hear—and follow—your inner guidance.