: When your mind isn't settled into "conventional categories," you’re more likely to see new possibilities and make connections between unrelated ideas.
If you’re currently stuck in the "messiness," try these shifts: ambivalence
The Art of Standing Still: Why Ambivalence Isn't Indecision Ambivalence often gets a bad rap. We’re told to "be decisive," to "pick a side," or that "if it's not a hell yes, it's a no." But ambivalence isn't just being unsure or hesitant ; it’s the high-voltage experience of simultaneously feeling two intense, opposing ways about the same thing. : When your mind isn't settled into "conventional
: When your mind isn't settled into "conventional categories," you’re more likely to see new possibilities and make connections between unrelated ideas.
If you’re currently stuck in the "messiness," try these shifts:
The Art of Standing Still: Why Ambivalence Isn't Indecision Ambivalence often gets a bad rap. We’re told to "be decisive," to "pick a side," or that "if it's not a hell yes, it's a no." But ambivalence isn't just being unsure or hesitant ; it’s the high-voltage experience of simultaneously feeling two intense, opposing ways about the same thing.