I recently read a fascinating piece by Maham Javaid in the Washington Post analyzing the World Happiness Report . The report, produced by the Wellbeing Research Center at Oxford and the UN, looks beyond GDP to find what actually drives life satisfaction. I've always held the philosophy that happiness should be a state of mind—something that shouldn't depend on others. But I admit, that is difficult to adhere to. It's hard to stay internally happy when you don't receive kudos for extra effort, or when you find yourself analyzing praise to see if it was just an afterthought. While my own philosophy has always been that happiness shouldn't depend on others, the data suggests that for most of the world, happiness is inherently social. Here is what the top-ranking countries teach us: 🇫🇮 Finland: Material Security Finland takes the top spot, but not because they are outwardly the "happiest" people. It's about anxiety reduction. "Researc...
For professionals who want to think deeper than their industry teaches. For people who want to lead, not just execute.
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As a social media person, don't you think that it should be prominently visible ??
Or mabye I am not looking hard enough
I didn't realize my email was not visible on my profileand just enabled that yesterday. I will also add a "Contact me" area to my blog. Most people contact me on Facebook or Twitter but you are right i must make it easier.
Shashi
http://blogoscoped.com/forum/123812.html
Thanks for the ehads up on the thread. I added the email address to all my blogs.
Shashi