Category: Change moments
-
I’ve Fallen back in Love With the Home That Made Me a Misery
I had fallen entirely out of love with our home, and it was making me impossible to live with (sorry, family, but at least I was open about it!). It no longer felt like home to me, and it showed.
-
If you can’t find the joy in your job, find another job
There’s more to work than working for a living. If your job isn’t giving you joy, could it be because you’re in the wrong job? David O’Sullivan asks three brave job-switchers to share their stories of change
-
How Our Little Blended Family Taught Me to Love Again
Add one child each to the mix and suddenly it is no longer a relationship with just two individuals, but four different people and two units coming together to form one. A blended family.
-
Why I’m Not Sending My Smelly Son to Boarding School
When my 11-year-old son announced that he wanted to go to boarding school, my friends were aghast. I suspect images of the Spud movies were racing through their minds.
-
The Toughest Thing About Life is Learning to Love Yourself
Apparently significantly more women than men suffer from Adrenal Fatigue. No doubt in part because we are socialised to view self-sacrifice in women as a virtue.
-
How Rugby is Tackling Change and Changing Tackles
There is a big difference between adapting and tinkering, with the latter often about treating the symptoms rather than the actual issue at hand.
-
Why Looking for a Home is Like Going on a Date
For some reason, despite being an available bachelor with an okay job and a good head of hair, the fear of rejection always overwhelms me. Or is it the fear of commitment? Only this journey will tell.
-
Will the Generations Ever Understand Each Other?
We invited two experts in across-the-gap thinking, Estée Roodt, an industrial psychologist, and Stuart Stobbs, advertising agency owner, to share their thoughts on generation gaps at the workplace.
-
The Three Big Lessons I’ve Learned About Love, Life, & growing Older
My late sister and I used to scoff at older people. Now that she’s gone, I find myself delighting in getting older.