Susan Cain: Revision history

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22 March 2023

12 February 2023

  • curprev 05:4005:40, 12 February 2023RCraig09 talk contribs 22,165 bytes +362 →‎Quiet: *Extroverts are more likely to focus on what’s happening around them. It’s as if extroverts are seeing ''what is,'' while their introverted peers are asking ''what if.'' ** Fabritius, Friederike, "A neuroscientist shares the 4 "highly coveted" skills that set introverts apart: "Their brains work differently"", CNBC, February 7, 2023 (''Quiet'' at p. 168) undo

24 November 2022

9 October 2022

8 October 2022

7 October 2022

  • curprev 23:2723:27, 7 October 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 20,941 bytes +267 →‎Bittersweet: he place where you suffer is the same space where you commit yourself to act. ** Sabater, Valeria (author of article), "Accettare l'imperfezione della vita" ("Accepting the imperfection of life"), ''La Mentee Meravigliosa (The Wonderful Mind)'', October 5, 2022. undo

13 September 2022

  • curprev 16:2216:22, 13 September 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 20,674 bytes +603 →‎Bittersweet: * The tyranny of positivity is the cultural message that all of us are sent that no matter what is happening, we should be putting on a happy face, that we should be soldiering through it and whistling cheerfully. I call it the tyranny of positivity and some people call it toxic positivity. What it really is, is a cultural directive that says, Whatever you do, don't tell the truth of what it's like to be alive. ** ''Forbes,'' September 9, 2022. undo

16 August 2022

  • curprev 21:4121:41, 16 August 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 20,071 bytes +163 →‎Bittersweet: * Longing is the great human state. ** Meraji, Shereen Marisol (interviewer), "How to be OK with your sadness and know when to embrace it", NPR, August 15, 2022. undo
  • curprev 21:2721:27, 16 August 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 19,908 bytes +344 →‎Bittersweet: * There's a reason that so many religions and wisdom traditions counsel meditating on death, and it's because there's almost nothing that delivers you so quickly to the preciousness of life than to think about death. ** Meraji, Shereen Marisol (interviewer), "How to be OK with your sadness and know when to embrace it", NPR, August 15, 2022. undo

11 June 2022

9 June 2022

8 June 2022

  • curprev 23:4123:41, 8 June 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 19,378 bytes +248 →‎Bittersweet: Living in a bittersweet state, with an intense awareness of life's fragility and the pain of separation, is an underappreciated strength and an unexpected path to wisdom, joy, and especially communion. ** ''Bittersweet'', Chapter 8 at pp. 183-4 undo

6 June 2022

  • curprev 06:0506:05, 6 June 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 19,130 bytes +190 →‎Bittersweet: * Human beings are a meaning-making species. ** Walker, Suzy (interviewer). "The Big Happiness Interview: Susan Cain on how embracing sadness can make us happier", ''Metro,'' June 5, 2022. undo
  • curprev 05:4505:45, 6 June 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 18,940 bytes +420 →‎Bittersweet: * When you listen to music, you can transcend your own pain and turn towards another and feel bonded with the whole of humanity because you know that they have felt that grief and love. By expressing it, by communing with that song or picture, you realize you are not alone. ** Walker, Suzy (interviewer). "The Big Happiness Interview: Susan Cain on how embracing sadness can make us happier", ''Metro,'' June 5, 2022. undo

1 June 2022

  • curprev 19:5819:58, 1 June 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 18,520 bytes +254 →‎Quotes: * To me, one of the best things in the world is that sublime moment when a writer, artist, or musician manages to express something you’ve always felt but never articulated, or at least never quite so beautifully. ** "About", SusanCain.net, May 2022. undo

31 May 2022

17 May 2022

  • curprev 06:0606:06, 17 May 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 17,767 bytes +269 →‎Bittersweet: Being able to exist in a place where light and dark meet is actually not a recipe for unhappiness. It is a recipe for a deeper kind of happiness. Bastian, Jonathan (host), "Bittersweet: Susan Cain on the joy of sweet sorrow", KCRW.com (Los Angeles), May 21, 2022. undo

15 May 2022

13 May 2022

  • curprev 23:0523:05, 13 May 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 17,074 bytes +440 →‎Bittersweet: (T)he bittersweet tradition spans centuries—it spans continents. And it teaches us that we are creatures who are born to transform pain into beauty. It also teaches us that our feelings of bittersweetness are some of the greatest gateways that we have to states of creativity and connection and love. Griscom, Rufus (interviewer), "Susan Cain on the Beauty of Sorrow and Longing (interview)". NextBigIdeaClub.com, April 7, 2022. undo
  • curprev 01:2401:24, 13 May 2022RCraig09 talk contribs 16,634 bytes +436 →‎Bittersweet: We listen to sad music for the same reason we go to church or synagogue or the mosque. We long for the Garden of Eden, we long for Mecca, we long for Zion because we come into this world with the sense that there is a more perfect and beautiful world to which we belong, where we are no longer. ** Mineo, Liz (interviewer), "That feeling you get when listening to sad music? It’s humanity.", ''The Harvard Gazette,'' May 11, 2022 undo

12 May 2022

11 May 2022

24 December 2020

4 October 2020

13 May 2019

2 May 2019

16 September 2017

6 May 2016

2 November 2014

29 March 2014

24 October 2013

20 October 2013

21 June 2013

28 March 2013

6 March 2013

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