Ratings8
Average rating4.4
Executive coach and psychologist Marshall Goldsmith discusses the emotional triggers that set off a reaction or a behavior in us that often works to our detriment. Do you find that at times you suddenly become defensive or enraged by an idle comment from a colleague? Or that your temper rises when another car cuts you off in traffic? Your reactions don't occur in a vacuum. They are the result of emotional and psychological triggers that often happen only in specific settings -- at meetings, or in competitive situations, or with a specific person who rubs you the wrong way, or when you feel under particular pressure. Being able to recognize those triggers and understand how the environment affects our behavior is key to controlling our responses and managing others at work and in life. Make no mistake -- change is hard. And the starting point is the willingness to accept help, and the desire to change. Over the course of this book, Marshall explores the power of active questions to get us to take responsibility for our actions -- and our failure to act. Questions such as "Did I do my best to make progress toward my goal?" "Did I work hard at being fully engaged?" He discusses the importance of structure in effecting permanent change. Because, he points out, change is hard, and without a structure to keep us on track, we inevitably relapse and fall back. Filled with stories from Marshall's work with executives and leaders, Triggers shows readers how to achieve meaningful and sustained change that will allow us to open our imaginations and escape the rigidity of binary thinking.
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Un livre excellent qui traite d'à quel point notre environnement joue en notre défaveur, de comment repérer les pièges qui jalonnent notre vie de tous les jours et les déclencheurs qui nous plongent dans des habitudes mauvaises. Mais qui donne aussi énormément de clés pour pouvoir s'auto-évaluer, combattre nos mauvaises habitudes et réussir à s'améliorer peu à peu jusqu'à devenir la personne que l'on veut être profondément. Beaucoup de réflexions, beaucoup d'exercices à mettre en place, mais une lecture excellente et enrichissante.
“The present is the ideal place to be. This is where we shape ourselves into a better person.”