Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer Doris Kearns Goodwin’s new book is Leadership: in turbulent times. It profiles Abraham Lincoln, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin Roosevelt, and Lyndon Johnson.
In this first installment of a four-part series in Psychology Today, I offer quotes from the book that address
what made Lincoln successful. The subsequent installments will do the
same for the other three.
Monday, May 27, 2019
Sunday, May 26, 2019
The Easing Exhortation: Fad du jour
Previously, self-help exhortations urged more drive, work ethic, doing the hard work needed for maximal achievement. But more recent urgings are to do less: slow down, breathe meditate, and change your mindset: Have a “growth mindset!” Think Positive. “PowerPose!” That continues even though rigorous attempts by independent researchers to validate such exhortations have largely failed to support the concept-creators’ puffy promise: Just follow my simple X-step plan and you can be fabulous.” Alas, we can’t all be fabulous. Posterity may well record this crop of fast-fix hawkers as modern-day snake-oil salesmen.
My PsychologyToday.com article today explains why the Easing Exhortation is a mere fad, which will end up taking its place among fads now ridiculed from phrenology to penis envy.
Labels:
fads,
pop psych fads,
self-help
Friday, May 24, 2019
Not-Full Disclosure: Withholding and lying to helping professionals
All of us have not told all to our helping professionals. And sometimes with good reason. But my PsychologyToday.com article today should help you decide when it's wise to disclose, and if you're a helping professional, how to encourage disclosure.
Wednesday, May 22, 2019
Recovering from Big Mistakes: Career or relationship
We’re all subject to commitment bias.
We commit to a career or spouse and understandably, it’s scary to
change. It’s been said that the only person who likes change is a wet
baby.
Sure, people change careers and people divorce, but at the risk of being contrarian, I don’t think they do it enough.
I make the case in my PsychologyToday.com article today and describe the low-risk baby steps you might take.
Sure, people change careers and people divorce, but at the risk of being contrarian, I don’t think they do it enough.
I make the case in my PsychologyToday.com article today and describe the low-risk baby steps you might take.
Labels:
career change,
change careers,
divorce,
divorcing,
should you divorce
Tuesday, May 21, 2019
Beware Pop Psych Fast Fixes
Accepting your limitations is out of fashion. We all need hope that we can be excellent.
Indeed, many of the popular pop psych gurus—excellent at selling—insist that you can be much better if only you follow their simple plan, for example, raise your expectations! Reframe! Have grit! A growth mindset! Power pose! Be fabulous!
Unfortunately, logically and empirically, such nostrums are longer on appeal than on real-world-significant results. In my PsychologyToday.com article today, I defend that assertion and describe approaches that are both more research-sound and reflect my experience with 5,500 clients.
Indeed, many of the popular pop psych gurus—excellent at selling—insist that you can be much better if only you follow their simple plan, for example, raise your expectations! Reframe! Have grit! A growth mindset! Power pose! Be fabulous!
Unfortunately, logically and empirically, such nostrums are longer on appeal than on real-world-significant results. In my PsychologyToday.com article today, I defend that assertion and describe approaches that are both more research-sound and reflect my experience with 5,500 clients.
Labels:
grit,
growth mindset,
power poses
Sunday, May 19, 2019
Connect with me on LinkedIn What to Say in 9 More Ticklish Situations
In response to my recent post, What to Say in 16 Ticklish Situations, a commenter asked me to write another post that said how I'd respond in nine other ticklish situations. Okay.
Saturday, May 18, 2019
What to Say in 16 Ticklish Situations: Tips on difficult conversations
In ticklish situations., we often get nervous if not downright tongue-tied.
Of course, the right thing to say varies with the situation and protagonists but perhaps the examples I offer in my PsychologyToday.com article today can be instructive.
Of course, the right thing to say varies with the situation and protagonists but perhaps the examples I offer in my PsychologyToday.com article today can be instructive.
Labels:
communication,
difficult conversations
Wednesday, May 15, 2019
"Nemkoisms"
A students in the course on career counseling
I’m teaching suggested I compile my “Nemkoisms” in a book. I don’t have
enough to fill a book but perhaps there’s enough for an article. It's my PsychologyToday.com contribution today.
Labels:
career advice,
career counseling
Monday, May 13, 2019
Contrarian Career Nuggets
I’m teaching a graduate course in career counseling.
When I was a student, having remembered little from the mountains I was
expected to read, I’m ruthlessly curating what I’m having my students
read. For example, I'll be handing out a collection of contrarian ideas that have most helped my clients. It's my PsychologyToday.com article today.
Labels:
contrarian career advice,
contrarian ideas
Friday, May 10, 2019
A Type A's Guide to Life
Type-A people do everything fast, often intensely. It's routinely criticized.
The good news is that while it's extremely difficult for Type A's to become Type B's, making a few smart choices can result in Type A's having a great life. I describe them in my PsychologyToday.com article today.
The good news is that while it's extremely difficult for Type A's to become Type B's, making a few smart choices can result in Type A's having a great life. I describe them in my PsychologyToday.com article today.
Labels:
type a behavior,
Type A personality
Wednesday, May 8, 2019
Bouncing Back: Real-world tested approaches
Some people find it easy to rebound from life’s slings and arrows. Much of that is because of intelligence: the ability to learn and problem-solve quickly in many contexts. Resilience is also a function of drive: Some people, from the womb, are more driven than others.
But what about people who aren’t driven brainiacs? My PsychologyToday.com article today offers tactics have helped such clients of mine bounce back from setbacks:
But what about people who aren’t driven brainiacs? My PsychologyToday.com article today offers tactics have helped such clients of mine bounce back from setbacks:
Labels:
resilience
Tuesday, May 7, 2019
4 Approaches to Change: advice-offering, rational-emotive behavior therapy, motivational messages.
He can’t stop pigging out. She can’t stop worrying. He can’t stop his substance abuse.
Even good psychotherapists (and advertisers) have a hard time getting people to change. It’s been said that it takes six to nine exposures to an ad to get someone to change their brand of toilet paper!
So, there are no magic pills yet. Best we can do, in our own lives and in trying to shepherd others to change, is to have a toolkit of interventions to draw from. My PsychologyToday.com article today describes four widely used ones.
Even good psychotherapists (and advertisers) have a hard time getting people to change. It’s been said that it takes six to nine exposures to an ad to get someone to change their brand of toilet paper!
So, there are no magic pills yet. Best we can do, in our own lives and in trying to shepherd others to change, is to have a toolkit of interventions to draw from. My PsychologyToday.com article today describes four widely used ones.
Labels:
change,
cognitive-behavioral therapy,
unstuck
Marty Nemko's Show Odd Man Out: We're All Less Impressive Than Our Facebook Profile
We're all less impressive than our Facebook profile. I tell all in story and song, with my wife popping up through the show to tell me when I'm full of it--with my doggie Einstein comforting me, in my show Odd Man Out. One performance only: A fundraiser for a very worthy cause: https://bit.ly/2Wx2gko
Labels:
Barbara Nemko,
odd man out
Monday, May 6, 2019
32 Powerful Influencing Words,,, and 10 that are overrated
Much has been written on the art of influence, but many of my clients
find such advice too difficult to implement.
They’ve had more success in trying to influence someone’s behavior or attitude by, where appropriate, using the 32 words I list in my PsychologyToday.com article today.
They’ve had more success in trying to influence someone’s behavior or attitude by, where appropriate, using the 32 words I list in my PsychologyToday.com article today.
Labels:
influencing,
persuasion,
power words
Saturday, May 4, 2019
A Debate Between a Rationality-Centric and Feeling-Centric Person
Of course, it’s easy to compromise and say, “Well, I'll live my life
incorporating both rationality and feeling." But we all fall
somewhere on the continuum, perhaps unconsciously.
If you’d like to make a more conscious choice about it, perhaps my PsychologyToday.com article today in which I offer fictitious debate between a rationality-centric and a feeling-centric person may be helpful.
If you’d like to make a more conscious choice about it, perhaps my PsychologyToday.com article today in which I offer fictitious debate between a rationality-centric and a feeling-centric person may be helpful.
Labels:
rationality,
reasoning
Thursday, May 2, 2019
8 Not-Random Acts of Kindness
Random act of kindness rarely benefit you other than the good feeling
of giving. For example, you put a quarter in the parking meter just
before the meter maid is about to give a ticket. It feels good but
doesn't otherwise benefit you. My PsychologyToday.com article today offers 8 acts of kindness that are more likely to.
Labels:
random acts of kindness
Wednesday, May 1, 2019
A Career Misconception
A new client came in with a common
misconception: She insisted that the way to land a good job is for
recruiters to tap your LinkedIn profile. (from among the 600 million!)
That strategy, like all job-search strategies will sometimes work, but it’s successful mostly when a candidate is currently well-employed doing similar work, for a very-low paying job, or for a job in high demand that requires a challenging skill set, for example, data scientist. This client fit none of those. In my PsychologyToday.com article today, I describe a likely more fruitful approach.
That strategy, like all job-search strategies will sometimes work, but it’s successful mostly when a candidate is currently well-employed doing similar work, for a very-low paying job, or for a job in high demand that requires a challenging skill set, for example, data scientist. This client fit none of those. In my PsychologyToday.com article today, I describe a likely more fruitful approach.
Labels:
job hunt,
job search,
LinkedIn
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