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Why Chasing Your Purpose May Be More Fulfilling Than Finding It

Finding the right ladder metaphor for purpose

In this blog, the concept of climbing the right ladder to find fulfilment and purpose is explored. Using the Japanese concept of "ikigai," the author discusses how to align what you love, what you're good at, what the world needs, and what you can be paid for to find your purpose. Tips for incorporating ikigai into daily life are also provided.

The Elephant and the Rider: Gaining Control of Your Thoughts and Actions

Elephant and the rider

What is the elephant and the rider?

You're hungry, tired, cold and thoroughly done. When faced with adversity, do you react the same way you would with a full stomach or when you're full of patience early on in your day?

It's easy to go through the days getting pulled from pillar to post like a chimp on autopilot, automatically reacting to external forces and hoping for the best.

Psychologist Jonathan Haidt has an interesting analogy. Imagine for a second an elephant. Upon the elephant is a rider. These two represent two sides of our thinking. The limbic system runs your basic instincts, food, water, sex and sleep. The neocortex, the other side, is what sets you as a human being apart from any other animal on earth. It gives you rational thinking. In essence, it stops the limbic system from taking control. It makes sure you don't act like a monkey. It helps you see future consequences and avoid hurling poo at strangers.

Haidt uses the example of a wild elephant being your limbic brain, with your neocortex being the rider, trying to control the elephant.

As the rational rider, you have a big challenge. You have an unwieldy beast that is much stronger (but thankfully not smarter) than you that has very primal desires. Desires that often aren't in your best interest. These desires come from hardwiring that is massively outdated.

Our environments evolution has outpaced our own. We evolved in small tribes of people of no more than 100. Man evolved to gorge on sugars and carbohydrates as they were finite we needed to get in as many as possible. Those that were mistrusting and pessimistic did best surviving conflicts with the elements and enemies. So they came up with strategies for survival.

Survival being the keyword, they scrapped by, persisted and grinded, striving for more. Fast forward to today, and we have that same hard wiring. Some of it serves. It means we persevere and improve, our societies are cleaner, safer and fairer. But lots of us are being walked through modern life by our outdated elephant, and this causes trouble. We aren't adapted to modern-day thriving.

It's no wonder our societies are riddled with anxiety, and people that have achieved so much still feel depressed and disillusioned. It is because the elephant is walking the rider, not the other way around.

So how do we gain more control?

You are the rational being and as the Stoics argued, you have the freedom to choose your emotions and reactions. The driver in charge of your destiny. Even if it may not feel like it. This understanding of which thoughts are your primal desires that can be tamed and which thoughts are your own is crucial. With it you can carefully consider others, your future and what's actually best in any given moment.

Don't be fooled though, it isn't an overnight decision. It's not as simple as telling the wild elephant to turn and go neatly past life's obstacles at your first command. Your elephant will resist. It will want you to persist with bad habits, and make hedonistic decisions that hurt others.

On your journey through life, aim to accept and understand the elephant. This is half the battle.

Consciously pause before you react. Ask yourself, 'is this the elephant or the rider talking?'. Reflect and think rationally. 'How would the best version of yourself behave here?' Would they resist the overreaction? Holding their tongue and silencing the mean words before automated verbal diarrhoea ensues. Would they turn down the appealing offer from an attractive stranger because they have a family back home?

We are all born with an elephant and a rider. We all have the choice of who will control the journey. Pursuing rational thought and continuous improvement is the answer to a happier, healthier life.

Learning by Great Questions: Why Asking the Right Questions is Essential for Self-Development

Learning by Great Questions: Why Asking the Right Questions is Essential for Self-Development

What is learning by questions?

Learning by questions, often referred to as the "Question-Driven Learning" approach, is a learning method that places a strong emphasis on asking questions as a means of promoting active learning and critical thinking.
 
In this blog post we will explore how to use questions as a powerful method of self-improvement.
You’ve probably received a vicious answer to a question before in your time. Your face crumpled, or depending on your manner, you threw back some expletives. You're then met with a nonchalant shrug of the shoulders and something like, ‘ask a silly question, get a silly answer’.
 
Those sarcastic dicks aside, what if we could ask great questions? If we could build this skill. What would our lives look like? … Great question.
 
Sometimes to get a solution to the problem, we must begin by asking different questions.
 

“If I would have asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.” Henry Ford

By asking different questions, Ford was able to change the world. If only he had asked himself, ‘how can I make these cars powered by electric?’
 
You can use this technique to improve your mental health. You can ask yourself questions to uncover whether it is rational and reasonable to feel the way you do. To understand if an emotion is fleeting. If it's more serious, you can use it to come up with solutions to the challenges you’re facing.
 
Questions will help you reframe things in your mind. If they are the right questions, they will help you prioritise your actions.
 
You might be asking yourself, what else are questions good for? Damn, we’re getting good at the question game.
 
Research shows children exposed to lots of questions tend to have higher levels of intelligence and language development.
 
There are quite a few theories on why but the one I gravitate towards is the Zone of Proximal Development.
 

What is the Zone of Proximal Development?

Psychologist Lev Vygotsky’s theory suggests that children learn best when they have support that is just beyond their current level of ability.
 
By asking questions that are challenging but still within a child's "zone of proximal development," we can help to scaffold children's learning and promote cognitive and language development.
 

How can you use this knowledge to improve your own skills? 

Talking of skills. Conversation is supposedly a dying art.
 
Any awkward, clunky social interaction will tell you it requires skill to have good conversations, especially with strangers or people you don’t share much common ground with.
 
Questions are the answer here.
 
A great place to start is by consciously asking open-ended questions. It's not a catch all but you’ll see a big improvement by starting questions with "why", “how” or “what”.
 

What is the FEW conversation method?

Another cool technique is using the FEW method for conversations. This stands for facts, emotions, and why.
 
To get the conversation flowing, you can start by obtaining facts. For example, ‘Are you working on anything interesting at the moment?’
 
Then you would move into emotions with your next question. Go open-ended this time. ‘How’re you liking it?’ ‘What’s the biggest challenge?’ as examples.
 
Then once you’ve really listened to the response, you can make the connection on an emotional level.
 
Next is where the conversation gets into interesting with the why.
 
“What makes you want to do that kind of work?” Or, “Was there something that when you were younger inspired you to get involved with this kind of work?’
 
At any point, you’re at a loose end, and you feel the conversation getting stale. Start again with FEW, and you will develop some good conversations and deeper connections.
 
What questions could you ask yourself?