Photo by Raimond Klavins on Unsplash

What Resonates?

Laust Lauridsen, MD

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Ever wondered why something feels more important than something else? Why are some events meaningful and others irrelevant? Why do some ideas look possible and others not? Why do you prioritize as you do? What makes the right decision right? There is a common answer: Resonance.

Take these statements:

“The climate challenge threatens to make life on Earth more unpleasant.”

“We must find a way to redistribute and recycle the planetary resources.”

“Equality and inclusion are the most important issues right now.”

“New skills are urgently needed to cope with the many changes at work.”

One or more statements may resonate with you. If they do, you may feel an urge to act and do something about it. If they don’t, you may ignore them and focus on something else in your life you find more important.

Of the 11.000.000 bits per second your brain processes, less than 50 bits can be handled consciously, and even less can be held in focus. What ends up in your mind’s spotlight depends on a complex interplay between brain configuration and mindsetting. The key is resonance.

In acoustics, if something resonates, it produces a deep, strong sound. It resounds and echoes. In psychology, resonance is when people share the same thoughts about something. It…

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Laust Lauridsen, MD

Help leaders and teams go beyond to transform and perform. Writer, speaker and facilitator.