You didn’t fail because you’re weak.
You failed because your brain told you a story—and you believed it.
Psychologists call it cognitive distortion. The rest of us call it Tuesday.
It sounds like this: I missed one gym session, so fitness is hopeless. I sent one awkward email, so my colleagues think I’m an idiot. I ate one cookie, so the diet is dead.
One crack in the pavement. And you decide to lie down forever.
The brain does this quietly, convincingly, and often. It doesn’t announce itself. It just rewrites what happened into something catastrophic, wraps it in emotion, and hands it to you as fact.
It isn’t fact.
Cognitive restructuring is a method therapists use to help people challenge their thoughts. The practice is simple: catch the lie mid-sentence, spot the distortion—black-and-white thinking, catastrophising, or drama—and ask one blunt question:
Is there actual evidence for this?
Usually, there isn’t.
One bad morning isn’t a pattern. One slip isn’t a collapse. One awkward moment isn’t a verdict on your character.
The goal isn’t relentless optimism. It isn’t a growth mindset poster on your wall.
It’s just this: stop letting a thought that took three seconds to form make decisions that last three months.
Your brain is not always on your side. But you can be.
Asking for a raise is a professional negotiation, not a personal plea.
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As a boss, you’ll often find yourself
When an employee comes to you asking for more money, how you handle the conversation will shape your reputation as a manager and determine whether you keep your best people. Resist the impulse to feel put on the spot. A direct, well-prepared employee who advocates for their own compensation is doing exactly what confident, high-performing people do. Treat it accordingly.
You’re mid-presentation. Your palms sweat, your heart drums, and you’re convinced the room can see every sign of it. They can’t. Your internal state is private. The version of you the audience sees is far steadier than the one you feel.
You launch passion projects with fervor, heart ablaze with possibility. Inevitably, that fire cools. Priorities shift, interests wander, life rearranges itself. The unfinished lingers, creating quiet unease.
Sustainable Aviation Fuel (SAF) is a prime example. The concept appears sound: convert used cooking oil into jet fuel, cutting aviation emissions while recycling waste. Western governments have thrown enormous financial support behind this vision. The United States offers tax credits of up to US$1.85 per gallon under the Inflation Reduction Act. Europe has implemented comparable subsidies and binding mandates requiring SAF blending ratios rising from 2 percent in 2025 to 70 percent by 2050. The promise is seductive: transform yesterday’s fryer grease into guilt-free flight.
Some environmental harm is inseparable from human activity. Mining, manufacturing, agriculture, aviation all carry costs, and pretending otherwise doesn’t reduce them. The honest position isn’t that we should stop flying or abandon cleaner fuels. It’s that we should be clear about what our policies actually produce, not what they were designed to produce. A net-zero aviation target built on a feedstock that doesn’t exist in sufficient supply isn’t a plan.