Leading Through Ambiguity: Agile Coaching Lessons from Simone de Beauvoir
Simone de Beauvoir wrote The Ethics of Ambiguity in 1947, just after World War II. Europe was devastated. Nazism had revealed the terrifying ease with which people could surrender their freedom, deny others’ humanity, and hide behind ideology. Philosophers and citizens alike were asking: how do we live—ethically—after such a...
The Anxious Generation: Understanding Generational Conflict, Mental Health, and the Future of Work
From Silent resilience to Alpha's unknown future — a journey through generational psychology, identity, and responsibility.
Generational Identity: Who They Are and What Shaped Them
In every family, workplace, and society, generations shape and are shaped by history. They inherit crises, build economies, raise families, fight wars, launch protests, and drive the...