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🤝🕒 The Best Interview 🕒🤔 One day, a student asked the Teacher, "Teacher, next week, I'll be conducting interviews with a large number of people who want to join my company as salespeople. They all have excellent resumes and recommendations, but I need to select only one out of fifty candidates. What advice do you have for me?" 🧐 The Teacher looked at him and asked, "What kind of advice are you seeking?" The student continued, 🤔 "Perhaps there's a way to quickly determine if someone is suitable for the job? Something to save time..." 😠 The Teacher, displeased, questioned, "What's the rush with your time?" 😏 The student replied, "Well, I wanted to save time so I wouldn't have to spend several days choosing a salesperson." 🙄 The Teacher retorted, "Have you considered how much time and money you'll lose if you rush and make the wrong choice?" The student lowered his head and pondered. Then he said, 😔 "Thank you, Teacher. I understand. This is not the action to rush through." ⌛💡 #Psychology #Binance
🤝🕒 The Best Interview 🕒🤔

One day, a student asked the Teacher, "Teacher, next week, I'll be conducting interviews with a large number of people who want to join my company as salespeople. They all have excellent resumes and recommendations, but I need to select only one out of fifty candidates. What advice do you have for me?"

🧐 The Teacher looked at him and asked, "What kind of advice are you seeking?" The student continued,

🤔 "Perhaps there's a way to quickly determine if someone is suitable for the job? Something to save time..."

😠 The Teacher, displeased, questioned, "What's the rush with your time?"

😏 The student replied, "Well, I wanted to save time so I wouldn't have to spend several days choosing a salesperson."

🙄 The Teacher retorted, "Have you considered how much time and money you'll lose if you rush and make the wrong choice?"

The student lowered his head and pondered. Then he said,

😔 "Thank you, Teacher. I understand. This is not the action to rush through." ⌛💡

#Psychology #Binance
📚 What Things Teach Us 🤔 🌞Once, the Master was sharing that every thing can teach something to a person. Someone asked, "Can things like a telephone, a train, or a telegraph really teach someone something?" 🌞The Master replied: "A telephone teaches us that everything we say can be heard from very far away. A train helps us understand that being just a minute late can mean being late forever. And a telegraph teaches us that every word comes at a cost." 📞🚂📠 #Psychology
📚 What Things Teach Us 🤔

🌞Once, the Master was sharing that every thing can teach something to a person.

Someone asked, "Can things like a telephone, a train, or a telegraph really teach someone something?"

🌞The Master replied:

"A telephone teaches us that everything we say can be heard from very far away. A train helps us understand that being just a minute late can mean being late forever. And a telegraph teaches us that every word comes at a cost." 📞🚂📠

#Psychology
✍️Memory 🌸 An old wise Chinese man was walking across a snowy field when he saw an elderly woman crying. 😢 "Why are you crying?" he asked. 🤔 "Because I'm thinking about my life, my youth, the beauty I saw in the mirror, and the man I loved. God is cruel for giving us the ability to remember. He knew I would remember the spring of my life and cry," she said. 😔 The sage stood on the snowy field, gazing intensely at a single spot, lost in thought. Suddenly, the woman stopped crying. 🧘‍♂️ "What do you see there?" she asked. 👀 "A field of roses," replied the sage. "God was kind to me when He gave me the gift of memory. He knew that even in winter, I would always be able to remember spring and smile." 🌹😊 #Psychology
✍️Memory 🌸

An old wise Chinese man was walking across a snowy field when he saw an elderly woman crying. 😢

"Why are you crying?" he asked. 🤔

"Because I'm thinking about my life, my youth, the beauty I saw in the mirror, and the man I loved. God is cruel for giving us the ability to remember. He knew I would remember the spring of my life and cry," she said. 😔

The sage stood on the snowy field, gazing intensely at a single spot, lost in thought. Suddenly, the woman stopped crying. 🧘‍♂️

"What do you see there?" she asked. 👀

"A field of roses," replied the sage. "God was kind to me when He gave me the gift of memory. He knew that even in winter, I would always be able to remember spring and smile." 🌹😊

#Psychology
🔍 How to Stay Focused at Work❄️ ✖️Disconnect. ✨Can't concentrate on important tasks? It might seem absurd, but then don't even try. People who know how to "disconnect" their minds handle complex tasks more successfully than those who let their brains decide when to work and when not to. Take control of the process. Decide for yourself when you need maximum concentration and when you can relax and disconnect. And don't feel guilty about it – these switches can actually make your work more effective. 💼🧘‍♂️ 🧘‍♀️ Take a Break. When you urgently need to get something done, taking a break is the last thing that comes to mind. But everyone needs a short break. We can focus on a task for a maximum of 90 minutes, after which a 15-minute break is necessary. Even a very short break, just a few seconds, can help – as long as you don't think about the current task. You can look out the window, do some simple arithmetic, or, even better, take a walk, do some stretching, or meditate. 🌿🚶‍♂️💆‍♀️ #Psychology @Motivation
🔍 How to Stay Focused at Work❄️
✖️Disconnect.
✨Can't concentrate on important tasks? It might seem absurd, but then don't even try. People who know how to "disconnect" their minds handle complex tasks more successfully than those who let their brains decide when to work and when not to. Take control of the process. Decide for yourself when you need maximum concentration and when you can relax and disconnect. And don't feel guilty about it – these switches can actually make your work more effective. 💼🧘‍♂️

🧘‍♀️ Take a Break.
When you urgently need to get something done, taking a break is the last thing that comes to mind. But everyone needs a short break. We can focus on a task for a maximum of 90 minutes, after which a 15-minute break is necessary. Even a very short break, just a few seconds, can help – as long as you don't think about the current task. You can look out the window, do some simple arithmetic, or, even better, take a walk, do some stretching, or meditate. 🌿🚶‍♂️💆‍♀️

#Psychology
@Motivation
🌟 How to Deal with Workplace Anxiety 🌟 You don't have to silently suffer; you can conquer anxiety at work. Here are a few tips to help you manage excessive worry during your workday. 🧐 Identify the Possible Cause Anxiety often manifests as increased heart rate, sweaty palms, chest tightness, concentration issues, or a stream of negative thoughts. To cope with an episode, you need to understand what triggered it. 🤔 Spot the Moments of Escalation Determine when your anxiety tends to escalate. It might occur during your commute, conversations with colleagues, or when you're assigned a new project. Try to find straightforward solutions. 🧩 Find Simple Solutions Once you've pinpointed the triggers, devise solutions. For instance, if you're having trouble with a colleague, have a conversation and set boundaries. If your commute frays your nerves, choose a different route. Such solutions can help you regain a sense of control over your mental state. 🤯 When You Feel Anxiety Creeping In, Ask Yourself Two Questions Develop a strategy to handle anxiety. "Find a peaceful place where you can 'reset.' Isolate yourself and analyze your thoughts. Ask yourself two questions: 'How do I feel right now?' and 'What happened today that brought me to this state?'" 🌄 Adjust Your Daily Routine During Non-Work Hours Establish a habit of caring for your physical, emotional, and mental health. Take evening walks with your dog, enjoy a café outing with a friend on Fridays, or engage in intense workouts. 🚶‍♀️🏋️‍♂️ #Psychology
🌟 How to Deal with Workplace Anxiety 🌟

You don't have to silently suffer; you can conquer anxiety at work. Here are a few tips to help you manage excessive worry during your workday.

🧐 Identify the Possible Cause
Anxiety often manifests as increased heart rate, sweaty palms, chest tightness, concentration issues, or a stream of negative thoughts. To cope with an episode, you need to understand what triggered it.

🤔 Spot the Moments of Escalation
Determine when your anxiety tends to escalate. It might occur during your commute, conversations with colleagues, or when you're assigned a new project. Try to find straightforward solutions.

🧩 Find Simple Solutions
Once you've pinpointed the triggers, devise solutions. For instance, if you're having trouble with a colleague, have a conversation and set boundaries. If your commute frays your nerves, choose a different route. Such solutions can help you regain a sense of control over your mental state.

🤯 When You Feel Anxiety Creeping In, Ask Yourself Two Questions
Develop a strategy to handle anxiety. "Find a peaceful place where you can 'reset.' Isolate yourself and analyze your thoughts. Ask yourself two questions: 'How do I feel right now?' and 'What happened today that brought me to this state?'"

🌄 Adjust Your Daily Routine During Non-Work Hours
Establish a habit of caring for your physical, emotional, and mental health. Take evening walks with your dog, enjoy a café outing with a friend on Fridays, or engage in intense workouts. 🚶‍♀️🏋️‍♂️

#Psychology
🚫False Beliefs Holding You Back☑️🌉 🙅‍♂️"It Was Nothing" Denial is the most powerful defense mechanism that allows us to effectively erase traumatic events from our memory. But even if we don't remember something, it still influences our decisions and life, striking at inappropriate moments. 😓 🙅‍♀️ "It Wasn't That Bad" Downplaying a problem may seem like a less terrible option because it acknowledges the problem's existence. However, trying to convince yourself that it didn't provoke strong emotions or serious harm ultimately leads to suppressed feelings exploding. 😡 🙅‍♂️ "It's a Disaster" Turning a molehill into a mountain isn't the best idea. By deliberately magnifying the significance of minor incidents, innocuous words, or fleeting feelings, we allow them to impact our lives. 😫 🙅‍♀️ "I Was Right About Everything" If you're the sole adviser — yourself, you won't be able to see the situation from a different perspective. Believing your point of view is the only correct one hinders finding a constructive solution. 🤷‍♂️ 🙅‍♂️ "I'm the Stupidest Person Alive" Usually, it's someone else's opinion that becomes a personal belief. It could be a parent, teacher, friend, or partner. If someone repeatedly tells you that black is white, you'll eventually believe it. 😔 🙅‍♀️ "My Life Is Awful" Everyone experiences ups and downs, calm and challenging times, joyful and sorrowful days. The best days are defined by the contrast with the bad ones. 🌦️ 🙅‍♂️ "I Have No Choice" This is one of the most common false beliefs. Even in the most dire circumstances, we have choices. The issue may be that we don't like the options we have to choose from. 🤔 🙅‍♀️ "I Can't Control Myself" It's an attempt to justify behavior one deems unworthy. Often, people with addictions use this phrase. 🙅‍♂️ Let's challenge these false beliefs and empower ourselves to make positive changes in our lives! 💪 #Psychology
🚫False Beliefs Holding You Back☑️🌉
🙅‍♂️"It Was Nothing"
Denial is the most powerful defense mechanism that allows us to effectively erase traumatic events from our memory. But even if we don't remember something, it still influences our decisions and life, striking at inappropriate moments. 😓

🙅‍♀️ "It Wasn't That Bad"
Downplaying a problem may seem like a less terrible option because it acknowledges the problem's existence. However, trying to convince yourself that it didn't provoke strong emotions or serious harm ultimately leads to suppressed feelings exploding. 😡

🙅‍♂️ "It's a Disaster"
Turning a molehill into a mountain isn't the best idea. By deliberately magnifying the significance of minor incidents, innocuous words, or fleeting feelings, we allow them to impact our lives. 😫

🙅‍♀️ "I Was Right About Everything"
If you're the sole adviser — yourself, you won't be able to see the situation from a different perspective. Believing your point of view is the only correct one hinders finding a constructive solution. 🤷‍♂️

🙅‍♂️ "I'm the Stupidest Person Alive"
Usually, it's someone else's opinion that becomes a personal belief. It could be a parent, teacher, friend, or partner. If someone repeatedly tells you that black is white, you'll eventually believe it. 😔

🙅‍♀️ "My Life Is Awful"
Everyone experiences ups and downs, calm and challenging times, joyful and sorrowful days. The best days are defined by the contrast with the bad ones. 🌦️

🙅‍♂️ "I Have No Choice"
This is one of the most common false beliefs. Even in the most dire circumstances, we have choices. The issue may be that we don't like the options we have to choose from. 🤔

🙅‍♀️ "I Can't Control Myself"
It's an attempt to justify behavior one deems unworthy. Often, people with addictions use this phrase. 🙅‍♂️

Let's challenge these false beliefs and empower ourselves to make positive changes in our lives! 💪

#Psychology
The Enigmatic Power of Numbers in Conscious ManipulationMagic of Numbers It's hard to believe, but numbers, measurements, and magnitudes play no less, and often a greater, role in manipulating consciousness than words.Manipulative techniques, relying on numbers, are built on the reputation of impartiality and precision.A person may doubt the source of certain data, their reliability, but in the manipulation of consciousness, numbers are used not to deceive someone but to distort reality or create a new one.On one hand, making a person doubt their own abilities, and on the other, playing on the natural desire to seem "smart," "knowledgeable in complex matters"; few are willing to readily admit, not only to others but also to themselves, that they are unable to understand complex data, calculations, and interpret them correctly.This is clearly evident, for example, during election debates, when candidates bombard each other with various figures expressed in percentages, prices, losses, indicators of inflation, statistical data, results of polls, etc., not allowing the opponent to comment or even refute specific data.Calculations here are not made to convey information to the opponent, but rather to implant a certain frightening or enticing number into the voter's consciousness. Even if the number is completely absurd, like "5 million jobs."In general, the use of numbers, especially in the form of complex calculations, formulas, equations, tables, etc., lends an air of "solidity" and apparent reliability to any information.This is especially true in the context of currency exchange rates: everyone is familiar with manipulative mantras about the dollar against the national currency, which serve not for banking or attempts at stock speculation but rather have a purely political purpose – to increase tension and anxiety in society.Almost each of us has experienced the so-called "left-digit effect": a price is set, say, not 60,000 but 59,999 – with this approach, the buyer feels like they are purchasing the item not for sixty thousand rubles but for fifty-nine thousand.Its impact is linked to the fact that people read from left to right and often do not pay attention to the last digits. Therefore, purchasing a gadget with a price tag of "9999 Dollars" seems much more advantageous than buying the exact same device for 10000 – and the benefit is not in the saved cent!Marketers refer to the infamous "nine" as a "magic number" and consider its use not as deceiving buyers, but as a common unconscious perception by people. From our perspective, it's pure manipulation!Historical figures also hold significant importance in manipulating consciousness. We are not talking about discussions among professional historians that take place within the scientific community and involve various approaches to periodization of historical events, source analysis, and so on. Instead, we're referring to media speculations that arise depending on the authorities' needs for specific indicators in each particular period.For example, according to the American historian Robert Conquest, whose works were widely cited during the Perestroika, the number of prisoners in the USSR simultaneously amounted to 10 million people in 1937-1938.Subsequently, these data were repeatedly refuted (currently, the most accurate data are considered to be those of V.N. Zemskov: 3,777,380 people were arrested throughout the period of repressions), but they managed to play a role in manipulating the consciousness of the Soviet people.However, despite Conquest's data being disproven multiple times, politicians, depending on their beliefs, continue to compete. On one hand, attempting to "shock" citizens with even larger figures of losses, and on the other hand, conversely, pushing the repression figures to the levels of statistical error.Inflating data on something genuinely tragic may be associated not only with manipulation but also with sincere misconceptions ("fear has big eyes").On September 11, 2001, during live broadcasts from the scene, it was reported that there were "tens of thousands dead" in the Twin Towers that were attacked. However, in the final counts, it turned out that a total of 2,983 people died during the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.Certainly, every person's life is valuable, and their death is a tragedy. Nevertheless, initial data on the victims of terrorist attacks, natural disasters, and technological catastrophes tend to be more trusted by viewers than the refined and, fortunately, often reduced loss figures.Since viewers who do not trust the authorities in reducing such data see it as an attempt for some reason to "conceal" the real losses—similar to propaganda during active military operations. One of its principles is to avoid reporting their own casualties and downplay their numbers, while exaggerating the losses on the enemy's side. It is believed that this approach sustains the morale of the army and the population.One way or another, exaggeration or understatement of figures is a crucial component of any campaign aimed at manipulating consciousness. For instance, data on participants in street protests are always presented as follows:1) From the organizers' perspective – the highest number;2) From the police or other law enforcement agencies – the lowest number;3) From "independent observers" (journalists, experts, etc.) – the average number.I dare to assume that this "average number" doesn't result from actual independent counts but rather by simply finding the arithmetic mean of the highest and lowest data. The use of average figures, in general, opens unprecedented opportunities for manipulating public consciousness.Although it is widely known that average values can only be used when there is no significant disparity between the parts of the whole, they are still successfully employed for consciousness manipulation by state statistical agencies worldwide. For example, when publishing data on "average salaries."It turns out that average indicators are derived from a dataset in which salaries of junior specialists and top managers of large state-owned corporations are mixed. To put it bluntly, salaries of daycare teachers and high-ranking officials in the Ministry of Education are blended together. When calculated this way, the figures for each sector do look quite decent. However, they fail to provide any real insight into the actual incomes of the majority of employees in this field.In this sense, the persisting illusions about the extraordinary earnings of programmers and other IT specialists in the USA are illustrative.Indeed, in average figures, incomes in this industry are high, but the salaries of leading specialists in Silicon Valley are far from what ordinary computer professionals can earn. Nevertheless, many IT specialists still harbor dreams of moving to the USA, but often find themselves greatly disappointed when it finally happens: their income turns out to be, if not equal, only slightly higher than the corresponding qualified salaries in their home country, while the purchasing power and the overall cost of living turn out to be completely different.Of course, highly skilled professionals, especially "computer geniuses," are in demand in the American IT industry. Still, to find them, one must, like gold prospectors, sift through hundreds of kilograms of sand. In this case, the "sand" is represented by the intricate messages, ranging from advertisements to private conversations, about the extraordinary incomes of IT specialists.Distorted images also arise as a result of the unscrupulous use of relative numbers without specifying absolute values.Interestingly, when media caught in such manipulations are confronted, they often attribute them to something like a copyediting error or technical glitch. Additionally, data on something is often presented without correlation with previous and usual figures.At the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic (March-April 2020), many information sources displayed daily death tolls. However, information about mortality during the same period in previous years was not provided. Readers were left with the choice either to delve into the matter themselves (the data on the number of deaths in March-April 2020 differed at the level of statistical error compared to previous years) or to be alarmed by the daily death toll and strictly adhere to all precautionary measures.Manipulation often involves presenting and evaluating certain information without any qualitative decryption.It's a well-known phenomenon: opposition politicians (this happens in any country with a government and opposition) lament when the state increases pensions and other social benefits.However, consciousness manipulation through numbers is not limited to political, economic, and social life. There are more serious interventions into a person's internal and, perhaps even, intimate world.Particularly in recent years, a global trend has emerged to alter age-related quantitative and qualitative characteristics. To achieve this, concepts like "boomers," "zoomers," and "millennials" are widely disseminated and introduced in the media. These terms are intended to suggest that individuals falling within these purely quantitative (birth years) definitions have some fundamental differences in goals, tasks, and worldviews. The UN and WHO continually shift age boundaries towards an increase in the age of hypothetical "youth." If many youth programs used to conclude around 27 years old, these programs have gradually extended to 35 years old. Currently, the World Health Organization has extended youthfulness up to 44 years. Other age categories have also been shifted, and, for instance, old age now only begins at 75.Partly, these changes are associated with the increase in life expectancy and quality of life in developed countries. However, mostly, they serve as a cover-up for the lack of qualified and reliable professionals in the labor market, as well as economic difficulties, resulting in the retirement age being raised in many countries.By formally extending the young and middle age, global organizations almost encourage those dreaming of retirement, manipulating them into considering themselves not yet old, i.e., ready to work without any privileges or benefits.The same goals are pursued by authorities when extending the age of safe childbearing for mothers. On the one hand, it's positive that medical advancements and improved quality of life give hope for motherhood to women of any age. On the other hand, it contributes to the emergence of "deferred motherhood," leading to health problems for women and their children. On the third hand, every individual's life differs from the advertising image, and theoretical possibilities don't necessarily translate into practical ones, leading to family dramas and personal tragedies.In general, blurring the lines between social and passport age provides ample ground for consciousness manipulation. Just recall election campaigns where opposition members use slogans like "hide grandma's passport," thereby showcasing the conservatism and loyalty of elderly people towards the existing power, influenced either by senility or induced by it.In one way or another, the "magic of numbers" is widely employed in consciousness manipulation—from simple commercial contexts to complex social and political scenarios.To be continued...#Psychology #Manipulation #Government

The Enigmatic Power of Numbers in Conscious Manipulation

Magic of Numbers It's hard to believe, but numbers, measurements, and magnitudes play no less, and often a greater, role in manipulating consciousness than words.Manipulative techniques, relying on numbers, are built on the reputation of impartiality and precision.A person may doubt the source of certain data, their reliability, but in the manipulation of consciousness, numbers are used not to deceive someone but to distort reality or create a new one.On one hand, making a person doubt their own abilities, and on the other, playing on the natural desire to seem "smart," "knowledgeable in complex matters"; few are willing to readily admit, not only to others but also to themselves, that they are unable to understand complex data, calculations, and interpret them correctly.This is clearly evident, for example, during election debates, when candidates bombard each other with various figures expressed in percentages, prices, losses, indicators of inflation, statistical data, results of polls, etc., not allowing the opponent to comment or even refute specific data.Calculations here are not made to convey information to the opponent, but rather to implant a certain frightening or enticing number into the voter's consciousness. Even if the number is completely absurd, like "5 million jobs."In general, the use of numbers, especially in the form of complex calculations, formulas, equations, tables, etc., lends an air of "solidity" and apparent reliability to any information.This is especially true in the context of currency exchange rates: everyone is familiar with manipulative mantras about the dollar against the national currency, which serve not for banking or attempts at stock speculation but rather have a purely political purpose – to increase tension and anxiety in society.Almost each of us has experienced the so-called "left-digit effect": a price is set, say, not 60,000 but 59,999 – with this approach, the buyer feels like they are purchasing the item not for sixty thousand rubles but for fifty-nine thousand.Its impact is linked to the fact that people read from left to right and often do not pay attention to the last digits. Therefore, purchasing a gadget with a price tag of "9999 Dollars" seems much more advantageous than buying the exact same device for 10000 – and the benefit is not in the saved cent!Marketers refer to the infamous "nine" as a "magic number" and consider its use not as deceiving buyers, but as a common unconscious perception by people. From our perspective, it's pure manipulation!Historical figures also hold significant importance in manipulating consciousness. We are not talking about discussions among professional historians that take place within the scientific community and involve various approaches to periodization of historical events, source analysis, and so on. Instead, we're referring to media speculations that arise depending on the authorities' needs for specific indicators in each particular period.For example, according to the American historian Robert Conquest, whose works were widely cited during the Perestroika, the number of prisoners in the USSR simultaneously amounted to 10 million people in 1937-1938.Subsequently, these data were repeatedly refuted (currently, the most accurate data are considered to be those of V.N. Zemskov: 3,777,380 people were arrested throughout the period of repressions), but they managed to play a role in manipulating the consciousness of the Soviet people.However, despite Conquest's data being disproven multiple times, politicians, depending on their beliefs, continue to compete. On one hand, attempting to "shock" citizens with even larger figures of losses, and on the other hand, conversely, pushing the repression figures to the levels of statistical error.Inflating data on something genuinely tragic may be associated not only with manipulation but also with sincere misconceptions ("fear has big eyes").On September 11, 2001, during live broadcasts from the scene, it was reported that there were "tens of thousands dead" in the Twin Towers that were attacked. However, in the final counts, it turned out that a total of 2,983 people died during the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001.Certainly, every person's life is valuable, and their death is a tragedy. Nevertheless, initial data on the victims of terrorist attacks, natural disasters, and technological catastrophes tend to be more trusted by viewers than the refined and, fortunately, often reduced loss figures.Since viewers who do not trust the authorities in reducing such data see it as an attempt for some reason to "conceal" the real losses—similar to propaganda during active military operations. One of its principles is to avoid reporting their own casualties and downplay their numbers, while exaggerating the losses on the enemy's side. It is believed that this approach sustains the morale of the army and the population.One way or another, exaggeration or understatement of figures is a crucial component of any campaign aimed at manipulating consciousness. For instance, data on participants in street protests are always presented as follows:1) From the organizers' perspective – the highest number;2) From the police or other law enforcement agencies – the lowest number;3) From "independent observers" (journalists, experts, etc.) – the average number.I dare to assume that this "average number" doesn't result from actual independent counts but rather by simply finding the arithmetic mean of the highest and lowest data. The use of average figures, in general, opens unprecedented opportunities for manipulating public consciousness.Although it is widely known that average values can only be used when there is no significant disparity between the parts of the whole, they are still successfully employed for consciousness manipulation by state statistical agencies worldwide. For example, when publishing data on "average salaries."It turns out that average indicators are derived from a dataset in which salaries of junior specialists and top managers of large state-owned corporations are mixed. To put it bluntly, salaries of daycare teachers and high-ranking officials in the Ministry of Education are blended together. When calculated this way, the figures for each sector do look quite decent. However, they fail to provide any real insight into the actual incomes of the majority of employees in this field.In this sense, the persisting illusions about the extraordinary earnings of programmers and other IT specialists in the USA are illustrative.Indeed, in average figures, incomes in this industry are high, but the salaries of leading specialists in Silicon Valley are far from what ordinary computer professionals can earn. Nevertheless, many IT specialists still harbor dreams of moving to the USA, but often find themselves greatly disappointed when it finally happens: their income turns out to be, if not equal, only slightly higher than the corresponding qualified salaries in their home country, while the purchasing power and the overall cost of living turn out to be completely different.Of course, highly skilled professionals, especially "computer geniuses," are in demand in the American IT industry. Still, to find them, one must, like gold prospectors, sift through hundreds of kilograms of sand. In this case, the "sand" is represented by the intricate messages, ranging from advertisements to private conversations, about the extraordinary incomes of IT specialists.Distorted images also arise as a result of the unscrupulous use of relative numbers without specifying absolute values.Interestingly, when media caught in such manipulations are confronted, they often attribute them to something like a copyediting error or technical glitch. Additionally, data on something is often presented without correlation with previous and usual figures.At the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic (March-April 2020), many information sources displayed daily death tolls. However, information about mortality during the same period in previous years was not provided. Readers were left with the choice either to delve into the matter themselves (the data on the number of deaths in March-April 2020 differed at the level of statistical error compared to previous years) or to be alarmed by the daily death toll and strictly adhere to all precautionary measures.Manipulation often involves presenting and evaluating certain information without any qualitative decryption.It's a well-known phenomenon: opposition politicians (this happens in any country with a government and opposition) lament when the state increases pensions and other social benefits.However, consciousness manipulation through numbers is not limited to political, economic, and social life. There are more serious interventions into a person's internal and, perhaps even, intimate world.Particularly in recent years, a global trend has emerged to alter age-related quantitative and qualitative characteristics. To achieve this, concepts like "boomers," "zoomers," and "millennials" are widely disseminated and introduced in the media. These terms are intended to suggest that individuals falling within these purely quantitative (birth years) definitions have some fundamental differences in goals, tasks, and worldviews. The UN and WHO continually shift age boundaries towards an increase in the age of hypothetical "youth." If many youth programs used to conclude around 27 years old, these programs have gradually extended to 35 years old. Currently, the World Health Organization has extended youthfulness up to 44 years. Other age categories have also been shifted, and, for instance, old age now only begins at 75.Partly, these changes are associated with the increase in life expectancy and quality of life in developed countries. However, mostly, they serve as a cover-up for the lack of qualified and reliable professionals in the labor market, as well as economic difficulties, resulting in the retirement age being raised in many countries.By formally extending the young and middle age, global organizations almost encourage those dreaming of retirement, manipulating them into considering themselves not yet old, i.e., ready to work without any privileges or benefits.The same goals are pursued by authorities when extending the age of safe childbearing for mothers. On the one hand, it's positive that medical advancements and improved quality of life give hope for motherhood to women of any age. On the other hand, it contributes to the emergence of "deferred motherhood," leading to health problems for women and their children. On the third hand, every individual's life differs from the advertising image, and theoretical possibilities don't necessarily translate into practical ones, leading to family dramas and personal tragedies.In general, blurring the lines between social and passport age provides ample ground for consciousness manipulation. Just recall election campaigns where opposition members use slogans like "hide grandma's passport," thereby showcasing the conservatism and loyalty of elderly people towards the existing power, influenced either by senility or induced by it.In one way or another, the "magic of numbers" is widely employed in consciousness manipulation—from simple commercial contexts to complex social and political scenarios.To be continued...#Psychology #Manipulation #Government
⭕To become happy... 🌟 ✴️To become happy, fill your hands with work, your heart with love, your mind with purpose, your memory with useful knowledge, and your future with hope. 💪❤️🧠📚🌈 #Psychology ➡️Profession as an Nurse is not so easy sometimes, but you have to balance your work place and home 🏡 pics of my operation theatre....Thanks
⭕To become happy... 🌟

✴️To become happy, fill your hands with work, your heart with love, your mind with purpose, your memory with useful knowledge, and your future with hope. 💪❤️🧠📚🌈

#Psychology

➡️Profession as an Nurse is not so easy sometimes, but you have to balance your work place and home 🏡 pics of my operation theatre....Thanks
🌟The Parable of Labor 🔨 The blacksmith repaired two plows. They looked the same. One of them remained standing in the corner of the barn. Its life was easier than the life of the other plow, which the peasant loaded onto the cart and brought to the field the next morning. There, it became beautiful and shiny. ✨🌾 When both plows met again in the barn, they looked at each other in surprise. The plow that had not been used for work was covered in rust. With envy, it gazed at its shiny companion. 🚜😕 "Tell me, how did you become so beautiful? I was so comfortable standing in my corner in the silence of the barn," it said. "Idleness changed you, while I became beautiful through hard work," replied the other plow. 💪👷‍♂️ #Psychology
🌟The Parable of Labor 🔨

The blacksmith repaired two plows. They looked the same. One of them remained standing in the corner of the barn. Its life was easier than the life of the other plow, which the peasant loaded onto the cart and brought to the field the next morning. There, it became beautiful and shiny. ✨🌾

When both plows met again in the barn, they looked at each other in surprise. The plow that had not been used for work was covered in rust. With envy, it gazed at its shiny companion. 🚜😕

"Tell me, how did you become so beautiful? I was so comfortable standing in my corner in the silence of the barn," it said.

"Idleness changed you, while I became beautiful through hard work," replied the other plow. 💪👷‍♂️

#Psychology
🤔 Triple Filter Test 🤔 🕸️Once, a friend came to Socrates and said: — I'm going to tell you something I heard about one of your friends. — Wait a minute, — Socrates replied. — Before you tell me anything, it must pass the triple filter test. Before talking about my friend, you must filter what you're going to say. The first filter is truth. Are you absolutely sure that it's true? — No, — the friend replied, — I heard it from others. — So, you're not sure it's true. Now, the second filter is goodness. Is what you're about to tell me about my friend something good? — On the contrary, it's something very bad. — So, you want to tell me something that might not be true and is also something bad. The third filter is usefulness. Will I personally benefit from what you're saying? — Well, not really, — the friend replied. — Well then, if what you want to tell me is neither true, nor good, nor useful, why should I know it? 🤷‍♂️ #Psychology @Motivation #Write2Earn
🤔 Triple Filter Test 🤔

🕸️Once, a friend came to Socrates and said:

— I'm going to tell you something I heard about one of your friends.

— Wait a minute, — Socrates replied. — Before you tell me anything, it must pass the triple filter test. Before talking about my friend, you must filter what you're going to say. The first filter is truth. Are you absolutely sure that it's true?

— No, — the friend replied, — I heard it from others.

— So, you're not sure it's true. Now, the second filter is goodness. Is what you're about to tell me about my friend something good?

— On the contrary, it's something very bad.

— So, you want to tell me something that might not be true and is also something bad. The third filter is usefulness. Will I personally benefit from what you're saying?

— Well, not really, — the friend replied.

— Well then, if what you want to tell me is neither true, nor good, nor useful, why should I know it? 🤷‍♂️

#Psychology
@Motivation #Write2Earn