#me personally i would never lie on a survey but if i did a polygraph wouldnt stop me bc i know theyre bullshit
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doing my reading for my psych class for once and the book was saying most studies were reporting notably higher rates of sexual activity in men and i was trying to figure out who they were having sex with (each other in some cases obviously but that didnt account for everything) Anyway turns out the self-reported rates of sexual activity go down for men when they are/believe they are monitored by a polygraph test. chat the disparity is bc men are lyingggg 😭😭😭😭😭
#text#I KNOW SCIENTIFIC INTEGRITY HATES TO SEE A MAN COMING!#reblogs off bc i dont feel like doing27 disclaimers abt ciscentrism in my class textbook. sorry. just laugh ok#sorry thats so funny. Theyre just lying............#Like i shouldve guessed that but i like that the book gave me a little treat as a reward for doing the reading and thinking critically#classblogging#also to clarify therye not actually taking a polygraph they just Believe they are and that makes them less likely to lie#me personally i would never lie on a survey but if i did a polygraph wouldnt stop me bc i know theyre bullshit
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New Post has been published on Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter's Blog
New Post has been published on http://blog.thebiggamehunter.us/it-starts-with-courage/
It Starts With Courage
With appreciation to Lance Secretan
I remember my first day of kindergarten many years ago at PS 90 in The
Bronx, NY. My mother was an immigrant who spoke accented English, taking me to class two blocks from our apartment on The Grand Concourse. She and my teacher walked me to my desk and offered me the loveliest look that I could imagine. My mother told me that she would be back a little later to pick me up and that my teacher would be looking out for me.
After a while, I learned another lesson. The lesson was that if I were to succeed in school, my job was to shit up, do what I was told, regurgitate a bunch of things when I was told to do it . . . OR ELSE I wouldn’t get into a good college.
Some years later, I attended CCNY in Harlem. I attended my classes and lectures but quickly learned that the lesson of college I was being given was, “Shut up. Do what you are told. Regurgitate a bunch of stuff when we tell you OR ELSE,” I won’t get a good job.
And when I found my job in recruiting upon graduation, I learned a similar lesson– “Shut up. Do what you are told. Regurgitate a bunch of
stuff when we tell you OR ELSE . . . “We’ll fire you! Is it any wonder that we live in times where people seem puzzled when they dedicate themselves to their employer, do their best and eventually are brought into a conference room and laid off. I have listened to many executives and staff alike lament about having done a great job and feeling betrayed.
“I did a great job!”
“My reviews were uniformly exceptional”
I keep hearing my own voice complaining about getting an B in a class when I thought I deserved an A. There was nothing I could say that would get the grade changed but I was seeking approval from an instructor who disagreed with my view of my work.
Yes, we all have bosses and teachers who evaluate our work. As a headhunter, I reported to the clients who paid me (and job hunters who didn’t pay me thought I reported to them), as well as to a business owner who demanded perfection from my work that was never achievable.
But the truth was I forgot the most important person who was part of my org structure.
Me.
You see, I fell prey to all the industrial conditioning I had received growing up wanting me to be “cooperative” or “a team player.” I lost track of myself with the push to be selfish in order to achieve sales goals (actual sales goals and, before that, grades). I succumbed to the motivation (the external pressure to comply with institutions and systems that were making sausage) of the systems I lived and worked in and lost my inspiration (the internal desire, independent of external pressure for conformity).
I became a high achiever who really didn’t care but did great work. I became someone who kept looking for unique ways to do what I did differently than others yet still meet my performance goals.
I hated it because all I was doing was making “artisanal sausage” and not doing what I really wanted. Maybe that willingness to sacrifice is part of being adult. I just never really found the correct percentage of sacrifice vs. self-satisfaction.
I hope you have.
I was introduced to Lance Secretan and a model he has called, “The CASTLE® Principles”
Courage
Authenticity
Service
Truthfulness
Love
Effectiveness.
Castle.
For a while, I wrestled with the idea of authenticity and truthfulness being redundant terms until I grew to see that authenticity was internal truthfulness or being genuine whereas truthfulness was how I might relate with the world at large.
However, as in the word, “Castle,” It truly does start with courage. It takes courage to face oneself and change. It’s why I now coach instead of headhunt.
As a headhunter, I found too many instances where my truthfulness was encouraged to be compromised and, thus, my truthfulness disappear. It was hard to watch a large check evaporate into thin air after doing so much work.
I found not caring about the people I represented or my clients. The love was lost in what I did and in the people I was hired to serve.
As a result, my effectiveness started to wane, all because I lacked the courage to change.
It started with courage and the desire to live life on my terms according to these principles. I can help you, too.
© The Big Game Hunter, Inc. Asheville, NC 2017
Jeff Altman, The Big Game Hunter is a coach who worked as a recruiter for
what seems like one hundred years. His work involves executive job search coaching, business life coaching for self-employed people who have a lunatic for a boss and leadership coaching. He is the host of “Job Search Radio” and “No BS Job Search Advice Radio,” both available through iTunes and Stitcher.
Are you interested in coaching from me? Email me [email protected] and put the word, “Coaching” in the subject line.
Do you have a question you would like me to answer? Pay $25 via PayPal to [email protected]
JobSearchCoachingHQ.com offers great advice for job hunters—videos, my books and guides to job hunting, podcasts, articles, PLUS a community for you to ask questions of PLUS the ability to ask me questions where I function as your ally with no conflict of interest answering your questions.
Connect with me on LinkedIn. Like me on Facebook.
You can order a copy of “Diagnosing Your Job Search Problems” for Kindle for $.99 and receive free Kindle versions of “No BS Resume Advice” and “Interview Preparation.”
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