1. People really can change. 2. We are beings that think, not beings that are thought. 3. Everyone is doing their best. 4. Every emotion is wonderful and useful. 5. Every day can be a good day.
Hello, Sorry, if I might be a bit closed minded(I often am) but I played the end of the 3rd thing 7:03 a few times and don't understand what you mean by "the things that are worth doing, rarely are". Is that a mistake? Could you explain and maybe give an example?
@@BozhidarKurtev Oh, I’m saying the things that are worth doing in life are early _easy_. I mean that a lot (not all) of the really valuable things we can come by require a bit of work.
@@Betwixt_App Alright, so I misinterpreted it. The things that are of personal meaning and value are worth the effort. I would say the same applies to suffering too, but in some contexts when it is unnecessary suffering due to wrong reasons, it is not really reasonable.
If anyone told you a woman couldn't play a great Jack Sparrow type character for the new Piatres of the Caribbean, simply hasn't looked in the right place. That's how I managed to let go of someone and not recent them. They just make me laugh when I think of them and just how much of rascal they are. Very Charming as well. 😅
Really interesting insights! A genuinely serious question, if I may: are you saying that someone with an IQ of below 50, no limbs, profoundly deaf-blind since birth, C1-C2 paralysed on a ventilator, immunocomprimised and frequently fighting infections, extensive facial and bodily scarring from a burn accident, without any family or assets and living off welfare state benefits in a pest- and mould-ridden bedsit can become in just a few days or weeks all of a record-breaking 100m & 200m Olympic (not paralympic) champion and Tour de France GC winner, world-leading neurosurgeon and a Nobel and Fields awards-winning Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge, a GQ front cover health & fitness mode, and with a supermodel wife by just shifting his thoughts? If not, at what point is the cutoff for your advice at which it is no longer practicably applicable? Or succinctly, just who is your audience and as a therapist do you feel you have a duty to make clear to whom what you advise is and isn't applicable?
1. People really can change.
2. We are beings that think, not beings that are thought.
3. Everyone is doing their best.
4. Every emotion is wonderful and useful.
5. Every day can be a good day.
Interesting info
Thanks 🖤
Great daily tools. I've bookmarked this video so I can look at it daily and do some of the suggestions.
Wonderful. Good luck! 🖤
Hi, I've saved this video to watch again and again👍
This is something I need to work with so Thank You 🙏❤
You’re welcome! Glad you enjoyed it 🖤
You are like a wise and balanced mentor i would want to be in my head. Thank you
Oh, thank you! I’m so glad you’re enjoying the content 🤍
Deeply appreciated
You’re so welcome 🖤
Thank You ✨💜✨
You’re welcome! 🖤
Thank you so much for this.
You’re so welcome 🤍
Thank you for this ❤.
You’re so welcome 🤍
Thank you.
You’re so welcome 🤍
Love your content ❤
Thank you! 🖤
Hi. Typo error in thumbnail to this vid. It's "from", not "form"
Ah, too late for that now. Thanks for pointing it out.
Oh!! I just realised I misread this completely earlier (I thought you meant one of the slides). I’ve edited the thumbnail. Thank you!
Hello,
Sorry, if I might be a bit closed minded(I often am) but I played the end of the 3rd thing 7:03 a few times and don't understand what you mean by "the things that are worth doing, rarely are". Is that a mistake? Could you explain and maybe give an example?
@@BozhidarKurtev Oh, I’m saying the things that are worth doing in life are early _easy_. I mean that a lot (not all) of the really valuable things we can come by require a bit of work.
@@Betwixt_App Alright, so I misinterpreted it. The things that are of personal meaning and value are worth the effort.
I would say the same applies to suffering too, but in some contexts when it is unnecessary suffering due to wrong reasons, it is not really reasonable.
Sharing where I can
Thanks! 🖤
If anyone told you a woman couldn't play a great Jack Sparrow type character for the new Piatres of the Caribbean, simply hasn't looked in the right place. That's how I managed to let go of someone and not recent them. They just make me laugh when I think of them and just how much of rascal they are. Very Charming as well. 😅
You're unbelievable.. nearly
I don’t know what this means 😅
Really interesting insights! A genuinely serious question, if I may: are you saying that someone with an IQ of below 50, no limbs, profoundly deaf-blind since birth, C1-C2 paralysed on a ventilator, immunocomprimised and frequently fighting infections, extensive facial and bodily scarring from a burn accident, without any family or assets and living off welfare state benefits in a pest- and mould-ridden bedsit can become in just a few days or weeks all of a record-breaking 100m & 200m Olympic (not paralympic) champion and Tour de France GC winner, world-leading neurosurgeon and a Nobel and Fields awards-winning Lucasian Professor of Mathematics at Cambridge, a GQ front cover health & fitness mode, and with a supermodel wife by just shifting his thoughts? If not, at what point is the cutoff for your advice at which it is no longer practicably applicable? Or succinctly, just who is your audience and as a therapist do you feel you have a duty to make clear to whom what you advise is and isn't applicable?
Of course not. Where have I said anything even remotely similar to that?
In any situation you can choose a more positive POV or perspective of what we've been through and this changes the suffering we go through.
After you do the second tip, it is mandatory to say "riddikulus" 🧙🏼♀️🪄
😂😂😂