What Sheldon Cooper Taught me About Problem Solving and Learning Effectively?

We all deal with problems every day.

Sometimes problem solving is a breeze. The other times, more often than not, it’s frustrating. 

So what can we do to make our problem-solving efforts less frustrating?

Is there a brain hack we can use to break down the mental blocks?

The answers to all of the above questions is a cheerful YES.

And Sheldon Cooper will show us exactly how.

The Skill We Need To Learn Today To Get Better At Anything Tomorrow

What if I told you that it’s possible to learn anything you want in just 20 hours?

Be it learning a new language, playing a new instrument or understanding a technical tool. Any skill that you want to learn can be learned without you feeling overwhelmed or lost.

It’s not magic. At least, not in the conventional sense.

The trick is to understand how our brain actually assimilates knowledge.

If you know the skill of “Learning How to Learn”, you can use it to learn anything you want.

Read on to find out how to acquire this skill.

How I learned to fall in love with criticism and why you should too?

How do you react when somebody criticizes you?

It feels like a punch in the gut, our shoulders get tense, our face gets serious and our ego goes into a hyper-defense mode, ready for war.

What if we could short-circuit that reaction and substitute it with a growth mindset?

Read on to find out how you can use criticism as your biggest tool for self improvement and personal growth.

How Army Officers Helped Me Learn an Important Lesson in Team Work and Efficiency?

“No plan ever survives contact with the enemy.” That’s what the army says.

This is what Sales Folks say: “No sales plan ever survives contact with customer.”

So, how do we ensure success?

An army officer says he knows the trick.

Read on to learn about a brilliant insight which is the key to achieve excellent team work, individual efficiency and eventually, project success.

Why some people almost always find time to pursue their interests, even in the busiest of schedules?

There is enough research done to show that “We have more leisure time today, than what we did a few years back.”

However, between you and me, do you really feel that you enough leisure time in the day? I mean, we can never get around to reading that book or learning that language.

In all this chaotic busyness of our lives, how are we supposed to carve out time for ourselves? How are we supposed to find the time that makes us happier, that allows us to pursue what we love doing?

A Harvard Professor has found good answers to this question. Read on to find out.