Posts

The Source for Emotions

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  How Emotions Are Made by Lisa Feldman Barrett argues something that initially sounds almost unbelievable: Emotions are not pre-packaged reactions hidden inside us waiting to “come out.” Instead, the brain constructs emotions. That sounds strange because most of us intuitively think emotions work like reflexes: something happens the brain detects it an emotion fires automatically Barrett argues it is more complicated than that. The Brain as a Prediction Machine Her central idea is that the brain is constantly trying to predict what is happening and what the body needs next. Your brain is not passively receiving reality like a camera. It is actively: interpreting sensory input predicting meaning preparing bodily responses using past experience to make sense of present sensations So when your heart races, stomach tightens, breathing changes, and attention narrows, the brain has to answer: “What does this mean?” And the answer is not always fixed. T...

The Core Divide: Weak Leaders vs. Strong Leaders

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  Leadership isn’t defined by position; it’s revealed by posture. The difference between weak and strong leaders isn’t in their titles — it’s in how they handle truth, power, and people. 1. Relationship with Truth Weak leaders distort truth to protect their image. They curate narratives, avoid transparency, and punish honesty. Strong leaders pursue truth even when it’s uncomfortable. They see reality as the raw material for improvement, not a threat to authority. Truth is the mirror that weak leaders avoid and strong leaders polish. 2. Relationship with Power Weak leaders hoard power to feel secure. They confuse control with competence. Strong leaders distribute power to build capacity. They understand that shared agency multiplies results. Power kept is fragile. Power shared is durable. 3. Relationship with Feedback Weak leaders hear feedback as accusation. Strong leaders hear feedback as intelligence. The weak defend their ego; the strong defend their mission. 4. Relationsh...

Love, Hate, and Religion--and the Influence of Politics

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  Religion can sanctify compassion—or sanctify cruelty. When faith becomes a badge of identity rather than a path of conscience, it can turn moral conviction into moral exclusion. America’s current struggle with religiously charged politics is not new, but it is newly volatile. Understanding how we arrived here—and how we might move forward—requires tracing the spiritual roots of division as carefully as the political ones. 1. Where we are now Across the United States, religious language increasingly shapes political rhetoric. Candidates invoke divine favor; voters interpret policy through moral absolutes. Surveys show that religious affiliation now predicts political alignment more strongly than class or geography . Evangelical Christianity, once a diverse movement of revival and service, has become a major partisan identity. Meanwhile, secular Americans often define themselves in opposition to that identity, creating a moral binary that mirrors the political one. The result is a...