A few years ago, in a broadcast interview, the psychologist Wayne Dyer relayed that one of the most important lessons he had learned about fully healthy individuals came from Abraham Maslow’s study of self-actualizing people. According to Dyer, Maslow discovered that highly developed people have three key traits in common. First, they do not invest in particular outcomes. Thus, they do not get locked into fixed plans. Instead, they remain open to discovery and make real-time iterative adjustments as they learn new information, even if that means scraping their original plans.
The Digital Fork in the Road Part II: The Choice
The Digital Fork in the Road Part II: The…
The Digital Fork in the Road Part II: The Choice
A few years ago, in a broadcast interview, the psychologist Wayne Dyer relayed that one of the most important lessons he had learned about fully healthy individuals came from Abraham Maslow’s study of self-actualizing people. According to Dyer, Maslow discovered that highly developed people have three key traits in common. First, they do not invest in particular outcomes. Thus, they do not get locked into fixed plans. Instead, they remain open to discovery and make real-time iterative adjustments as they learn new information, even if that means scraping their original plans.