Guest blogger Lorie Sheffer: Myside bias

Pumpkins for sale
We judge and are judged, mostly by what we see or hear, whether it’s true or not (photo: Lorie Sheffer)

 

Myside Bias. Confirmation Bias. “The tendency for people to favor information that confirms their preconceptions or hypotheses regardless of whether the information is true.”

It’s a common occurrence. People want to prove they are right, and so they tend to filter any information they see or hear. Sometimes they will totally disregard anything that is contrary to what they already believe.

How sad that this happens when we have decided we don’t like someone. We will only listen to or believe negative things about them. What if we tried to find a positive for every negative? What if we slowly started to realize that the person isn’t as bad as we chose to believe? If that person is someone we don’t personally know, if they happen to be a public figure, then what we think about them has little affect on them. WE feel the consequences of those negative emotions. As the late comic Buddy Hackett so brilliantly stated, “While you’re carrying a grudge, they’re out dancing.”

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It’s like a broken record for successful people in midlife

Magic Bands packaging
Walt Disney faced bankruptcy as a young businessman

 

The recurring and popular theme is the same for most successful people reaching midlife.

  • They worked hard for a long time
  • Were tempted to quit more times than they could count
  • Managed meager earnings, at best, in the beginning.

Seth Godin’s post yesterday reminded me what we all forget – Seth wasn’t always successful.

This is the path.

The good news?

The longer we follow it, the more difficult it becomes to turn back.

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We, the ‘healthy’ living have no context to motivate us to live as if time is limited

Daisies
The ultimate sophistication is simplicity, nature, and living well.

 

Epiphany just now: We, the ‘healthy’ living have no context to motivate us to live as if time is limited.

Only those seriously ill or injured, terminally ill, or fighting for their life, can possibly know for real the measure of a day.

What prompted this was Helen Keller:

So much has been given to me, I have no time to ponder over that which has been denied.

Anyone else wanna live like that?

Life has something wonderful in store if we don’t quit.

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