Aliveness

Available Today, Aliveness Mindset: Lead and Live with More Passion, Purpose, and Joy Shares Practical, Proven Strategies For Readers To Create Their Own Aliveness

Retrieved on: 
火曜日, 4月 2, 2024

CHICAGO, April 2, 2024 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- Launched today, Aliveness Mindset: Lead and Live with More Passion, Purpose, and Joy (Forefront Books) by Jack Craven, a former trial lawyer, seasoned CEO, distinguished executive coach to CEOs and their C-Suite teams, and long-time certified facilitator of Young Presidents Organization (YPO), shares how executives and other leaders can reach their potential in their aliveness and live their best professional and personal lives.

Key Points: 
  • "In Aliveness Mindset: Lead and Live with More Passion, Purpose, and Joy, I give leaders the tools they need to bring the best, most vibrantly alive version of themselves into the world."
  • Interested individuals can register to join it here: https://weavinginfluence.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZEvdeiqqTwjG9VLi-st_r...
    In Aliveness Mindset, Craven shares that having an "aliveness mindset" is the path to freedom.
  • For more information on Craven and Aliveness Mindset: Lead and Live with More Passion, Purpose, and Joy, visit jackcraven.com .
  • "More than a book, Aliveness Mindset is the toolkit every leader needs to access their highest and best selves.

Reports of the death of psychoanalysis are exaggerated, as Adam Phillips’ elegant, elusive writing shows

Retrieved on: 
水曜日, 4月 3, 2024

Psychoanalytic ideas were dominant in several academic fields, held in esteem by intellectuals, and well known, if notorious, among the general public.

Key Points: 
  • Psychoanalytic ideas were dominant in several academic fields, held in esteem by intellectuals, and well known, if notorious, among the general public.
  • Boiled down to its essence, psychoanalysis is an approach to understanding the mind’s dynamics and treating its ailments.
  • Review: On Giving Up – Adam Phillips (Penguin) But although its influence has shrunk, reports of the death of psychoanalysis are exaggerated.
  • Almost all are in humanities fields: screen and cultural studies, gender studies, criminology, linguistics and history and philosophy of science.

A celebrated literary figure

  • The prolific writings of Adam Phillips epitomise this modern day humanistic expression of psychoanalytic thinking.
  • Phillips, who has worked for many years in England as a psychotherapist, is also a celebrated literary figure.
  • He has received high praise as “the best living essayist writing in English”, “one of the finest prose stylists in the language” and “our greatest writer in psychology”.
  • The hallmark of Phillips’s work is taking an idea or phenomenon, often ordinary or obscure, and patiently investigating its hidden complexities.

On Giving Up

  • On Giving Up is not, in fact, about giving up in any systematic way.
  • The lead essay inspects the many forms of giving up, from renouncing a vice to abandoning all hope.
  • Giving up can be a form of “enlightening disillusionment”; failure at one task but success at something else.
  • There are a few false notes: is suicide really the “only paradigm” for giving up and is it true “no one writes in praise of giving up”?

Hypnotic style

  • Phillips’s style throughout the book is almost effortlessly fluent and erudite.
  • The theoretical dimension of his work musters a variety of literary critics and French writers, but always circles back to Freud and his commentators.
  • For psychoanalytic aficionados, he is especially drawn to the British and French mystics: Wilfred Bion, Jacques Lacan and D.W. Winnicott.
  • After a while, despite the simple words and the smooth sentences, the experience becomes hypnotic.

Curiosity versus knowledge


Clues to why Phillips’s work is so clever and thoughtful in the reading but also so insubstantial in what it leaves behind can be found in two ideas he presents at each end of the book. In the prologue he cites with approval the psychoanalyst Marion Milner’s distinction between narrow and wide attention and near the conclusion he develops a distinction between curiosity and knowledge.

  • A related issue arises when Phillips draws a distinction between curiosity and knowledge.
  • A true psychoanalyst, after all, “is someone who is, above all, curious about curiosity.” It is hard to argue against the value of curiosity, but to place it in opposition to knowledge is odd.
  • Normally, we might think curiosity drives us towards knowledge and knowledge rewards and reinforces curiosity rather than dulling it.
  • It is not obvious why psychoanalysis or any other approach to studying the mind could not aspire to be both a form of (widening) curiosity and a form of (narrowing) knowledge.
  • But in Phillips’s work we see a highly developed psychoanalytic curiosity that abstains from making clear knowledge claims.

Psychology versus psychoanalysis

  • I’m sure he would agree what he is doing is not psychology in the usual senses.
  • Psychoanalysis of Phillips’s variety doesn’t aspire to be any kind of science and it sets itself up as a radically different approach to the study of mind and behaviour.
  • A psychology of giving up, for example, would be less astute in unravelling the inner complexities of self-sacrifice and renunciation than Phillips’s psychoanalytic account.
  • Such an approach is not inherently preferable to Phillips’s form of psychoanalysis, but it is decidedly different, and not because it is deficient in curiosity.


Nick Haslam receives funding from the Australian Research Council.

Celebrate Chaco's 35th Birthday with "Chaco for Life" Campaign, Special Releases, Teases Nationwide Tour

Retrieved on: 
火曜日, 1月 30, 2024

This kicks off a year-long wave of specialized custom sandal drops that will be available monthly on chacos.com .

Key Points: 
  • This kicks off a year-long wave of specialized custom sandal drops that will be available monthly on chacos.com .
  • The heart of the festivities lies in the fourth annual Chaco Tour, a tradition that has become synonymous with adventure, connection and the spirit of Chaco.
  • "We're inviting Chaco Nation to celebrate our birthday with us all year long," said Lindemulder.
  • Follow @chacofootwear on Instagram for Chaco for Life Tour location announcements and updates.

New Motivational Book from Success Coach Jeff Patterson Wins Prestigious Pinnacle Book Achievement Award

Retrieved on: 
月曜日, 9月 18, 2023

ASPEN, Colo., Sept. 18, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- The Big Thing Effect: How to Transform Your Life Forever, written by Success Coach and bestselling author Jeff Patterson, has won a Pinnacle Book Achievement Award in the Business category.

Key Points: 
  • The Big Thing Effect: How to Transform Your Life Forever, written by Success Coach and bestselling author Jeff Patterson, has won a Pinnacle Book Achievement Award in the Business category.
  • ASPEN, Colo., Sept. 18, 2023 /PRNewswire-PRWeb/ -- The Big Thing Effect: How to Transform Your Life Forever, written by Success Coach and bestselling author Jeff Patterson, has won a Pinnacle Book Achievement Award in the Business category.
  • The Pinnacle Book Awards honors some of the finest books published by a wide variety of Publishing Houses, Small Presses, Independent and Self Publishers.
  • The Pinnacle Awards are based on book content, quality, writing style, presentation and cover design.

How an African collection of art in Canada is celebrated with care and community

Retrieved on: 
月曜日, 7月 10, 2023

A significant collection of traditional African art has had a home in Canada for almost a hundred years.

Key Points: 
  • A significant collection of traditional African art has had a home in Canada for almost a hundred years.
  • At Agnes Etherington Art Centre, we are working on new, more hospitable practices of care for this collection.
  • The African art collection, named after donors Justin and Elisabeth Lang, consists of approximately 600 three-dimensional pieces that originate from 19 West African countries.

European market in African art

    • The European market in African art had boomed in the 1920s and 1930s.
    • European enthusiasm for African art was partly due to its influence on modernist artists, such as Picasso, Cézanne and Gauguin.
    • The establishment of an African art market therefore had direct ties to European colonial projects and imperial commercial networks that reinforced colonial violences.

At least four lives of the collection

    • At the time, it was the largest collection of African art at a Canadian university.
    • As a body, the collection has had at least four lives: one within Africa as an active part of everyday life, another in Europe as part of a thriving art market, in Canada as a private art collection and now as a museum holding on a university campus.

‘You are holding communities’

    • In this film, Samwel Nangiria, Maasai community leader, notes:
      “You are not holding artifacts, you are holding communities … museums need to be a place of people, not a place of artifacts.
    • When we see these objects we see our parents, we see our ancestors.”
      “You are not holding artifacts, you are holding communities … museums need to be a place of people, not a place of artifacts.
    • How do we adjust our practices to respond to a colonial past and to the gaps in our understanding?

New curatorial approaches

    • I was confronting isolation, impending economic migration to Canada and the start of curatorial work at Agnes and Queen’s University.
    • I felt compelled to find new ways to enliven a collection that inhabited an awkward silence in the museum.

‘With Opened Mouths’

    • For the Agnes exhibit With Opened Mouths, we discarded the glass display cases often used in museums and instead used labelling that echoed contemporary African signage.
    • With Opened Mouths: The Podcast is a digital safe space where I interview racialized creatives to discuss their practice.

Moving out of the vault

    • The collection will move to a temporary home on campus in preparation for renovations at Agnes.
    • The move of the African collection out of the vault is momentous.

Celebration of presence, welcome, care

    • The project emerged after Bitek’s first visit to the vaults.
    • will be a moment of hope, welcome and care.
    • In essence, these curatorial practices seek to acknowledge the African communities and artists who have, unknowingly, built up the collection at Agnes.