\t\t\tAnd how you can benefit from it! \t\t\t
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| | | | | | | | During the height of the 2021 pandemic, an article in The New York Times explored a shared experience many felt but couldn't express: it was a feeling of drifting aimlessly, a melancholy that touched everyone. This feeling, called "languishing," reflects the joyless and aimless state many struggled with. The term “languishing” was coined by sociologist Corey Keyes in 2002 to explain different levels of mental health. Nearly two decades later, Adam Grant brought it to the forefront in a New York Times column, striking a chord with many.
Acknowledging our feelings of languishing allows us to explore ways to navigate our emotions and emerge with clarity and resilience. Get to know more about the author as he shares his own struggles, how he discovered languishing, and how readers can benefit from it. |
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