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» Committed to Making a Difference: The INFJ Personality TypeSome of the world's greatest leaders of movements to better the world are believed to have been INFJs. We owe a deep debt to these rarest of personality types.Tags: creativity, empathy, relationships» More on the “Art” of Benign ConfrontationConfrontation doesn't have to mean making judgments about character, and it doesn't have to mean putting people on the defensive.Tags: in practice, relationships, responsibility» Can intensive mindfulness training improve depression?Depression affects about 350 million people worldwide and is the leading cause of disability. Mindfulness training is a promising approach to decreasing depressive symptoms.» Are people who bite their nails perfectionists?Pulling hair, biting nails, picking skin are not simply 'nervous' habits, a new study finds, suggesting they are instead associated with perfectionism, frustration and boredom.
» Committed to Making a Difference: The INFJ Personality TypeSome of the world's greatest leaders of movements to better the world are believed to have been INFJs. We owe a deep debt to these rarest of personality types.Tags: creativity, empathy, relationships
Some of the world's greatest leaders of movements to better the world are believed to have been INFJs. We owe a deep debt to these rarest of personality types.
Tags: creativity, empathy, relationships
» More on the “Art” of Benign ConfrontationConfrontation doesn't have to mean making judgments about character, and it doesn't have to mean putting people on the defensive.Tags: in practice, relationships, responsibility
Confrontation doesn't have to mean making judgments about character, and it doesn't have to mean putting people on the defensive.
Tags: in practice, relationships, responsibility
» Can intensive mindfulness training improve depression?Depression affects about 350 million people worldwide and is the leading cause of disability. Mindfulness training is a promising approach to decreasing depressive symptoms.
» Are people who bite their nails perfectionists?Pulling hair, biting nails, picking skin are not simply 'nervous' habits, a new study finds, suggesting they are instead associated with perfectionism, frustration and boredom.