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saucetest

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1 points·by saucetest·vor 3 Monaten·0 comments

Talent as a Reinforcement Loop, Not a Gift

medium.com
5 points·by saucetest·vor 9 Monaten·0 comments

How to Determine What Is Important

medium.com
6 points·by saucetest·vor 11 Monaten·0 comments

Why "How many tennis balls fit in a bus?" can be a good interview question

medium.com
7 points·by saucetest·vor 12 Monaten·5 comments

The Arsonist's Reward: Why We Fix Instead of Prevent

medium.com
7 points·by saucetest·letztes Jahr·0 comments

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saucetest
·letztes Jahr·discuss
Our modern therapeutic language reflects this bias toward progressive, intervention-based thinking. We constantly speak of treating, healing, and fixing—as if every human struggle requires a scientific solution. This mindset creates an arrogance that dismisses prevention and time-tested wisdom in favor of active interventions.

We've become so convinced that our science-based approach holds all the answers that we've forgotten a crucial distinction: there's a difference between an informed life and a good life. Traditional approaches often focused on prevention—building resilience, teaching coping skills, and creating supportive communities before problems arose. But prevention doesn't fit our therapeutic language of diagnosis and treatment.

This reflects a broader cultural shift where we believe we can engineer solutions for every aspect of human experience. We're so focused on what we can fix that we've lost sight of what already worked - and it often worked without an intervention.