Today our expert guest is Kare Anderson, an Emmy-winning former NBC and Wall Street Journal reporter, now connective behavior speaker and columnist for Forbes and Huffington Post.
In Kare’s TEDTalk, The Web of Humanity: Becoming an Opportunity Maker, she mentions being a phobically shy, stuttering young girl. However, a couple influential teachers and mentors gave her opportunities to find greater motivation.
“It’s hard to overcome something. It’s easier to supplant something with a greater motivation.”
One of these mentors helped her realize that was insatiably curious with a talent for asking questions, and that was the greatest thing he taught her: “the capacity to tell someone about a talent they have, that they’re unaware of, is wonderful.”
It’s vital that we learn more about ourselves because, until we know how we’re wired, we are living life reactively.
These experiences were incredibly influential in Kare’s life, and they led her to studying and speaking about connective human behavior.
Communicating to Connect
One of the behaviors she’s studied is how people can communicate to connect.
Opportunity Makers
It’s increasingly important that we connect with others because the world needs more opportunity makers: people can see an opportunities or problems and then forge the right team to solve a problem or seize an opportunity, better and faster than others.
An important skill for solving problems, especially in our politically polarized climate, is fostering mutuality: the ability to draw people away from conflict by creating or offering a better and mutually-appreciated action.
Kare believes that, if we want a more meaningful life that’s more adventurous, we should embrace the opportunity to bring the right people together to support an action that matters to them – and we should take any opportunity to support others by highlighting their positive aspects, even if they’re not aware of it themselves.
By being mindful of others in this way, and supporting them, we can connect others and help them find mutuality.
The Biggest Helping: Today’s Most Important Takeaway
Specificity is key to almost anything in life, so Kare wants you to think about two things:
By getting clear about those things, you’ll have a better understanding of what you might want to do differently in your daily life, and who you might want to bring into it.
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