PERSPECTIVE LIVING

Because life's better when we can see it from more angles. And because the world is full of perspectives waiting to be heard.

Guest Writer

There’s space for everything: The meaning of happiness in Japan

Different religious perspectives, life, death, and the afterlife: There’s room for everything in the Japanese perspective on happiness. Above all, says Japan expert Carmen Rucci from Italy, there is room for joy. And so, this is Carmen’s story.

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Superstition in Italy: Ingrid Evert-van Woudenberg on an old way of seeing still very much alive today

Superstition may be strange to many of us, in Italy this perspective is as normal as the sun rising. It is one in which history, religion, death and mystery all happily merge into one. Here, new author Ingrid from Rome lifts the veil on this age-old way of seeing life.

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The world of work through the eyes of a highly sensitive person: Dr. Candan Aydemir-Tam tells all

They say our fast-paced world needs highly sensitive people, or HSPs as they are often called. What about the workplace? Can people with this complex and empathetic mind add value here too? Or are they just too sensitive. Dr. Candan Aydemir-Tam, healthcare psychologist, tells us everything.

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Something is growing: Dr. Toh Wong and Dr. Naveed Akhtar on how conventional and alternative healthcare are merging

Should healthcare be either conventional or alternative? According Dr. Toh Wong and Dr. Naveed Akhtar, more and more health practices are combining the best of two worlds. It may still be an usual way of thinking in our time, but here, the two British doctors and integrative pioneers tell us all about the changing health landscape: In both the UK as well as further afield, things are merging.

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Life from the perspective of a sensitive Rainforest Mind (RFM)

If humans are like ecosystems, some are like the rainforest, says psychotherapist and author Paula Prober. People with a Rainforest Mind (RFM) are highly complex, sensitive, and intuitive. They may be effervescent, intense, colourful, and they may be the most misunderstood. Here, Paula Prober paints us a picture: the world according to a rainforest mind.

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