Blog
Vonnegut’s Take On Your Career
Some of my most interesting clients start out as “mountain-climbers”: they move from one career peak to another, a higher one each time, planning to find more satisfaction with each
Harmony in Your Work-Life
There has been a lot of talk about work-life balance, which is a fair allocation of your attention, time and energy between personal life and career. In the past few
More Than It Seems
Recently, I had an opportunity to ask a number of analytically educated professionals (engineers, software developers, mathematicians, architects, actuaries, etc.) whether they think their work can potentially be performed by
Stay Afloat in Uncertainty
What is taking up your mental space these days? Believe it or not, I’m thinking about you, a lot. I wonder whether you have someone to talk to, and whether
“I’m Not This Person!”
Back in November, I met up with an acquaintance after about a year of not seeing each other. We’ve casually known each other for over 16 years. Our conversations are
How to Not Go Crazy This Winter
Can we make it through this pandemic winter and come out on the other side without going crazy? Let’s try. We can start with these quick 10 yes/no questions to
Anxious While Waiting? Do This.
As the fate of the US is being decided this week during the Presidential Election, our anxieties may peak, no matter which side we support. This is a post about
Time of Uncertainty? Ha!
An increasing number of articles on “the time of uncertainty” dispense quick advice: how to handle uncertainty, how to reduce it, what to do in uncertainty…. Let me ask you:
Sensing the Unknown
Take a look at this picture. Notice anything unusual about it? Do you know what is in the jar after looking at the picture, or is the content still unknown?
Our (Changing) Rules of Engagement
Much of what used to know about the rules of engagement is simply not true anymore, thanks to the pandemic. Some of what you used to know is no longer
A Case of Exploding Eggs
In April, I wrote a post about high achievers hitting low points during the pandemic. In May, I almost burned down our house, leaving boiling eggs on the stove. This
Are you wearing pants?
My husband tipped me off to an apparently popular question being asked during work conference calls these days: “Are you wearing pants?” This joke goes to the heart of the
“Things Should Be Different”
“Coping During Coronavirus” Series, Part 10 of 10. What do you do when you feel stuck in a situation that is unfair, or seems completely wrong? “Things should be different!”
Restless While Waiting? Do this.
“Coping During Coronavirus” Series, Part 9 of 10. Can you recall what it feels like to sit in a waiting room? A waiting room could be literal or metaphorical: …
When to Take the Easy Path
“Coping During Coronavirus” Series, Part 8 of 10. Many of us a struggling now, amid this crazy pandemic, figuring out how we can be good at everything-at-once: working, parenting, taking
Recalculating
“Coping During Coronavirus” Series, Part 7 of 10. In recent posts, I’ve been drawn to introspection: REcognition (and embarrassment), REcovery (and comeback), and now – REcalculating, the idea I borrowed
What’s Not Broken
“Coping During Coronavirus” Series, Part 6 of 10. Wisdom comes at the expense of having broken something important – friendships, habits, glasses, heels, codes, hearts, dishes, connections… So, it’s logical
When We Can’t Bulletproof Our Lives
“Coping During Coronavirus” Series, Part 5 of 10. This topic keeps coming up in NYC after 9/11, after all the school shootings, and hurricanes, literal and metaphorical. Now, during a
You’re a BBC Dad now
“Coping During Coronavirus” Series, Part 4 of 10. One of the greatest concerns parents have been expressing this week as they work from home, with kids around, isolated from elderly
A Way Through Uncertainty
“Coping During Coronavirus” Series, Part 3 of 10. Whether you are ready to acknowledge it or not, you’re a wayfifnder – someone who can “know as you go”, not always