Archive for August, 2008

Exceptional and out of bounds – eccentrics and society

Rejected for excellence Children with outstanding talents sometimes get rewards and acclaim, but many are overlooked, discounted or unsupported. Adults with exceptional talents can also live on the fringes of recognition and contribution to society, some by choice, but often on account of mainstream discomfort with outsiders. Even those who are called eccentric may want [...]

Multiple talents – Melora Hardin on acting, directing, singing

Melora Hardin plays “Jan” on the tv series “The Office” and has roles in a number of film and tv projects. She sang as Fantine in “Les Miserables” at the Hollywood Bowl earlier this month; made her feature film directorial debut in 2007 with the movie “You,” and has produced two albums of her writing [...]

Barack Obama and building identity

Comfortable with being different A new Los Angeles Times profile describes some of Barack Obama’s journey, including these excerpts: As a scholarship student at Occidental College in Los Angeles in 1979, Obama faced assertions of identity everywhere: the Democrat/Socialist Alliance, Black Student Assn., Jewish Student Action Coalition, feminist support group, Movimiento Estudiantil Chicano de Aztlan. [...]

Learning to be happy – The Happiness Hypothesis

The darkness before the dawn “Being happy is something you have to learn.” Harrison Ford Ford certainly has known plenty of unhappiness. He was shy as a child, bullied at school for not “fitting in.” According to Laura Silva Quesada, in her article A reminder from Indiana Jones, “Every day, they’d tease the future Indiana [...]

Entertainment psychology – A Jungian perspective on the feminine in film

A new look at the Wizard of Oz John Beebe, MD is a Jungian analyst, and co-author, with Virginia Apperson, of the new book, The Presence of the Feminine in Film. In a Shrink Rap Radio podcast interview, he talks about how movies bring to life female characters and the feminine aspect of our psyches, [...]

Healing and art – Jenna Forrest on transcending sensitivity

Author and success consultant Jenna Forrest writes in her memoir Help Is On Its Way about growing up with the trait of high sensitivity. In our recent podcast interview, she talks about empowering and transcending sensitivity. From the interview: Millions of highly sensitive people right at this moment are carrying a heavier burden than the [...]

George Vaillant on Meaning – find your purpose with your heart & mind

George Vaillant, MD, author of a number of books including Spiritual Evolution, notes in his Positive Psychology News Daily article, “If we are to find meaning in life, we must pay as much mind to our limbic ‘hearts’ as to our neocortical cognitions. “Our positive emotions evoke thought-action tendencies in humans that broaden human attachment [...]

Creative potential – Anger and creativity

Christian Bale’s tantrums Acclaimed for his dynamic performance as Batman – such as in the new film “The Dark Knight” – Christian Bale won’t be charged after his arrest for alleged assault on his mother and sister, in part because they didn’t want to press the matter. Bale has denied the accusation. But according to [...]

Dealing with self-criticism

Criticism saps our passion for life “Certain basic doubts keep Colin from enjoying a truly comfortable sense of superiority.” In a series of podcasts adapted from his book Toxic Criticism, Eric Maisel, PhD talks about how “criticism and self-criticism interfere with our ability to find our life purpose and live as strongly, passionately, and effectively [...]

The airhead mask and self-limiting – dealing with self sabotage

Acting dumb kept her from being a nerd “I realized that acting smart or talented in school made me sound like a geek or nerd. So I remodeled myself as an airhead.” Yoky Matsuoka Excerpts from a NOVA scienceNOW/PBS profile : Robotics pioneer, prosthetics visionary, and 2007 recipient of a MacArthur grant, Japanese-born Yoky Matsuoka [...]

The mind’s potential – Josh Waitzkin: The Art of Learning

Josh Waitzkin was a National Chess Champion as a boy, and the subject of the movie Searching for Bobby Fischer. He writes in his new book The Art of Learning: An Inner Journey to Optimal Performance about finding at a young age that “there is something profoundly hollow about the nature of fame. I had [...]

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