Tim Tamashiro

  • Victoria Krupska-Anisimovahat Zitat gemachtvor 2 Jahren
    Ikigai is “the reason you get out of bed in the morning.”
  • Jen602hat Zitat gemachtletztes Jahr
    They cited radio coaching expert Valerie Geller, sharing that “head, heart, pocketbook, and transformation” radio stories would be the focus of the narratives I would tell.
  • Jen602hat Zitat gemachtletztes Jahr
    The Ikigai map has four simple directions to follow:
    1.Do what you love
    2.Do what you’re good at
    3.Do what the world needs
    4.Do what you can be rewarded for
  • Victoria Karimovahat Zitat gemachtvor 2 Jahren
    Ikigai comes in two parts. They are half Ikigai and full Ikigai. Half Ikigai focuses on you: What do you love and what are you good at?
  • Victoria Karimovahat Zitat gemachtvor 2 Jahren
    the full cycle of Ikigai: seeing how doing what you love, and what you’re good at, provides for the world and flows rewards back to you. As soon as you commit to your half Ikigai, you will begin to see benefits.
  • Victoria Karimovahat Zitat gemachtvor 2 Jahren
    In the morning, when your alarm clock rings and you reach over with your eyes still closed, blindly smacking at the off button, are you waking up to merely survive the day? You deserve more than that
  • jmislichat Zitat gemachtvor 2 Jahren
    Belt colors in karate signify growth and development. As it was first done, all students started with a white belt. As each student gained more and more knowledge and skills, she would, over time, traditionally dye her belt a darker color.
    The first color the belt would be dyed was yellow. Yellow showed that the student was aware that she was receiving her first beams of knowledge, or sunlight. The student had opened up her mind to learning and growth.
    Next, the student would earn the privilege to dye her belt orange. Like the glowing sun warmed the earth to nurture new seeds, so too did the lessons that accompany the orange belt. The student could feel her strength grow and her understanding deepen.
    A green belt showed that the student, like a seed, had broken out above ground and was reaching toward sun stretching for more knowledge.
    Blue belts represented the sky, as the student grew farther toward the sun.
    Purple demonstrated that the student had developed deep and more advanced knowledge. They started to understand the significance of maturity and the power of knowledge.
    When the student dyed their belt brown, they were nearing earnest wisdom. All their hard work and determination had fruits to bear. They were just beginning to understand what the fruits meant.
    Red meant danger. When a student had earned her red belt, she was capable of inflicting great harm. She posed great danger if she didn’t remain vigilant and respectful of her capabilities. The objective of the student with a red belt was to be cautious and seek more knowledge.
    The student finally earned her black belt only when she fully understood the profound power of her knowledge. Black represented the vastness of space beyond the sun. There is much more to learn. The student became a teacher who continues to learn, forever.
  • R Anandhat Zitat gemachtvor 2 Jahren
    to Job Craft

    Job crafting is a proactive approach to adapting your employment into meaningful work.
  • R Anandhat Zitat gemachtvor 2 Jahren
    How to Job Craft
  • R Anandhat Zitat gemachtvor 2 Jahren
    1.What am I good at?

    2.What do I love to do?
fb2epub
Ziehen Sie Ihre Dateien herüber (nicht mehr als fünf auf einmal)