These posts about TEDxOPorto will be written in English
so I can share with the world the ideas worth spreading.
The image I chose to illustrate this post is an example of an odd phenomenon that spread like virus amongst Facebook users: the “quotephobia”.
Almost
everyone posts quotes on Facebook!
Some are light and humorous, others intend to be deep and thoughtful, others are clear directed messages or menaces to someone.
Some are light and humorous, others intend to be deep and thoughtful, others are clear directed messages or menaces to someone.
I am a
victim of this phobia.
I also post inspiring messages and reflective quotes with some expectation that the criteria I use to chose these notes will disclose features of my intelligence and intellectuality to an anonymous audience.
I also post inspiring messages and reflective quotes with some expectation that the criteria I use to chose these notes will disclose features of my intelligence and intellectuality to an anonymous audience.
This is
bullshit!
José Soares, one of the brightest speakers that attended TEDxOPorto, demonstrated how
this "positive thinking mania", this exhilaration made out of pictures and axioms, levels us all as basic human beings capable of absorbing simple clichés and sound bytes.
this "positive thinking mania", this exhilaration made out of pictures and axioms, levels us all as basic human beings capable of absorbing simple clichés and sound bytes.
Social
media has made it possible for us to have access to limitless information. This
is of course extraordinary as it stimulates our knowledge.
However you cannot absorb nor comprehend all the information you read. On one
hand because you don’t have enough time, on the other hand because you do not
have the elementary background that ables you to understand some contents.
As a
consequence we tend to become generalist posters of a random variety of
subjects we are not proficient about, believing that the simple comprehension of
a catchphrase is enough to apprehend the entire encyclopedia.
This
exaggerated belief in ourselves, in our knowledge, in our capacity to do things
and achieve results is creating a generation of pretentious leaders. We trust
the attraction law and the power of positive thinking so we are certain that
anything is possible and that there are no limits for our capacities.
As José
Soares brightly puts this mindset: soft skills are becoming soft killers.
Soft skills
don’t make you an expert in anything.
Soft skills do not guarantee you´ll become grand and great.
The fact is that a leader comes out of knowledge, luck and courage. There are countless limitations to our ability to grow professionally: some are a consequence of the lack opportunities or wrong timing, others are a consequence of each person's biological limitations.
Soft skills do not guarantee you´ll become grand and great.
The fact is that a leader comes out of knowledge, luck and courage. There are countless limitations to our ability to grow professionally: some are a consequence of the lack opportunities or wrong timing, others are a consequence of each person's biological limitations.
We are not all bright and brilliant!
Intelligence is not a sine qua non condition to evolve
socially and professionally but neither will positive thinking lead you through life if you don't work hard.
"Things don't just happen: you make them happen!" (this could be a post)
You can't always be a bright idiot but please don't be stupid!
"Things don't just happen: you make them happen!" (this could be a post)
You can't always be a bright idiot but please don't be stupid!
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