March 2010 Archives
You want to discover something new, which is
impossible if you're attached to the conviction that you already
know all the answers. Valuing not-knowing is the basic of learning and all creativity and innovation. It's the state of mind that's open to all kinds of new possibilities and even hoping you might be surprised. Instead of defending old opinions or positions or answers, your goal is to look with fresh eyes. I like to think of this as 'rational humility' a maturity we develop by admitting that it's impossible to ever have all the answers.
--Change Your Questions, Change Your Life: 10 Powerful Tools for Life and Work (BK Life (Paperback))
--Change Your Questions, Change Your Life: 10 Powerful Tools for Life and Work (BK Life (Paperback))