
Articles
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1 week ago |
rfr.bz | Lincoln Stoller
You are of two minds even before you’ve had a thought; one is intellectual, the other emotional. “We are all multiple personalities, in a sense, and to be healthy mentally, I think, learning what those multiple personalities are and inviting them in your life is really important.”— Sally Field, actress and trauma survivorLincoln Stoller, PhD, 2025.
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3 weeks ago |
rfr.bz | Lincoln Stoller |Richard Pallardy
The article, by Richard Pallardy in the IT Leadership section of Information Week, is titled, “What Can Executives Do to Improve Mental Health for Themselves and Their Teams?”Andrew Shatté and I are the two main references. Andrew is an executive and co-founder of meQuilibrium, a human resource management company. I founded Braided Matrix, Inc., a business software development company. I closed Braided Matrix 15 years ago when I became a psychotherapist.
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3 weeks ago |
mindstrengthbalance.substack.com | Lincoln Stoller
Current time: 0:00 / Total time: -1:08:34Audio playback is not supported on your browser. Please upgrade. “We always think with the world. So when you go inside your head you’re arranging all those things you have already picked up into some kind of order which makes sense for you. That allows you to see structure in the world you have experienced.”—David AmerlandThis is the first interview that I’ve hosted but, in fact, it played out similarly to all dialogs I’ve had.
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1 month ago |
rfr.bz | Lincoln Stoller
At some point my father Ezra became Wright’s photographer of choice. Wright was so impressed with my father’s photos of his work that wouldn’t let magazines publish photographs of his work unless they were taken by my father. I never met Wright but his influence permeated my father’s work and aesthetics. The two similarly appreciated clean, natural forms but where Wright took as much space and spectacle as possible, my father’s architectural photographs gave as much as possible.
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1 month ago |
rfr.bz | Lincoln Stoller
“In the midst of chaos, there is also opportunity.”— Sun Tzu, from The Art of WarRandom versus strategic gameplay are two extremes in board games. Chess is strategic, Chutes and Ladders is random. Games can be defined by where they fall on this divide. Mature gamers disdain random while immature gamers are entertained by it, but there’s more to it than maturity. Strategic games are puzzles assumed to have a hidden solution. Random games don’t have a hidden solution because they provide no control.
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