Saturday, March 14, 2009

Linsey Dawn Mckenzie Hotel



. According
have existed in ancient Greece a sculptor named Pygmalion who fell madly in love with one of his sculptures, which he called Galatea. Such was the degree of desire for her, finally, thanks to the intersection of Aphrodite, his work came to life desired.

This old myth has been named to the effect that, when you're proposing firmly a thing, get it. Perhaps it because believe you can get projects synergies towards meeting the objective?, Or maybe because when you really want something, it produces a "sidereal plan" for creating your dream? By way of "The Secret" or "The Alchemist" ...


Our expectations for the capabilities of other influences. Everyone has the ability to do something if we believe in him. But attention is also an inability to do if they prejudge.

In fact, there is a certain symmetry in this effect. Because we all respond somehow to the expectations others have of us, we usually end up doing what others expect of us ...

I think it right that we try to apply positively the "Pygmalion Effect" in the areas of our lives. In education, family, work, social ... I think that helps feed the self-esteem, to approach life with optimism filter and keep the desire to achieve new goals.


Faced with a desire to achieve something, to neuronal tissue can grow and extend their axons creating new connections enable us to help physically and mentally in that direction. Thus scientists have joined the bandwagon, "the effect of Pygmalion? - Finding a scientific explanation of this myth, of this effect, this practice of magic, this stellar plan, or this evening Universal conspiracy.


And that is true to the popular proverb "He who follows it, gets it."

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