How to Help Someone Having a Panic Attack
Stay calm, guide their breathing, and remind them it will pass — your steady presence is the most powerful help during a panic attack.
Stay calm, guide their breathing, and remind them it will pass — your steady presence is the most powerful help during a panic attack.
The greatest gift you can give another person is your undivided attention — put the phone down and truly listen.
When the search for meaning stalls, the fastest way forward is to be genuinely useful to one person.
The relationships you build throughout your career will open more doors than any resume ever could.
Before you argue against an idea, make sure you can state it in a way its supporters would endorse.
The ability to challenge ideas while preserving relationships is one of the most valuable skills you can develop.
Effective feedback is specific, behavior-focused, and delivered privately with the person's growth in mind.
Frame your requests in terms of what matters to the other person, and cooperation becomes natural instead of forced.
Being reliable, responsive, and genuinely pleasant to work with creates more career opportunities than raw intelligence.
Fire with clarity and honesty, but never strip someone of their dignity in the process.
Before assuming someone meant to hurt you, consider that they might simply not have been thinking.
Public recognition builds people up; private correction preserves their dignity and your relationship.
Attacking someone's character shuts down conversation; addressing specific behavior opens the door to change.
Both partners can be right about how they experienced the same event -- maturity is accepting this.
The most powerful reframe in conflict is shifting from "me vs. you" to "us vs. the problem."
When you earn more than friends, suggest varied-price activities and treat occasionally with grace — keep money from becoming the friendship dynamic.
Truth delivered without care is a weapon, not a gift -- honesty requires empathy to be constructive.
Feelings do not need to be logical to be valid -- dismissing them as irrational only damages trust.