Why Good People Don’t Make Headlines
Most people are actually decent, but we’re wired to notice threats over kindness. After 30 years studying human behavior, I learned the good stuff just doesn’t make headlines.
Most people are actually decent, but we’re wired to notice threats over kindness. After 30 years studying human behavior, I learned the good stuff just doesn’t make headlines.
Teaching empathy is easy. Living with it daily? That’s where people hit a wall. When you start practicing empathetic communication, you might sound fake, your partner might stare at you confused, and you’ll suddenly see all your unmet needs. Chapter 2 of my book tackles this messy reality nobody warns you about.
Learning empathy feels wrong at first – that clunky, scripted feeling when you try new skills? It’s actually your brain rewiring itself. Most people quit here, but weird is part of growth.
Working alongside teams beats handing them AI documentation. Developers learn faster when they see real implementation, edge cases, and scaling in action.
Most people stumble through relationships hoping things will just work out. I discovered cognitive empathy – the skill of understanding others without drowning in their emotions. Conflicts became conversations, and every relationship transformed.
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