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Life Education

Kumar Motiani

LD Seminal Communication Rule of Thumb 2 of 10

This is the second of ten sessions in the Seminal Communications Rules of Thumb Series by the Leadership Development Group.
This session concentrates on yet another aspect of self-discovery to facilitate rapport building with others.
Dr. Dellinger's Geometric Psychology is the subject line this week. We hope that it will help you in every walk of your day-to-day life.
Please share your feedback with us so that we can grow and progress together.
Enjoy this session.

(humble) regards

Gail and kumar

Rating: 5/5 stars
Tags: building, communication, develoipment, dr., gail_johnson, More…geometric, kumar_motiani, leadership, psychology, rapport, seminal, susan_dellinger
Views: 582
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Kumar Motiani Comment by Kumar Motiani on June 23, 2009 at 11:23pm
Dear Elisabeth,
Thanks ever so much for loving it and pinning it down as your favourite. Well, now that you have your three points made out and had your good laugh, and even more importantly, set your aims and your envirnment sorted out, it only remains for me to wish you all the success that you deserve more importantly with your children's leadership - and if it helps, we will hopefully have influenced their thought process(es) positively and had an impact on their understanding of their environment.
What better way than that to spread the word to the next generation?
I'm sure Gail joins me in applauding your sense of application and in helping us see things in a different light, which I, for one, had not yet thought about.
Please do go through the rest of the videos and comment them at will.

humble regards

kumar
Elisabeth Smith Comment by Elisabeth Smith on June 23, 2009 at 10:08pm
I ABSOLUTELY LOVE THIS!!!!!! So far this is may favorite... lol It has gotten me down to a tee. I couldn't decide between the circle and the squiggly line.

I am a very strong Right-brained thinker which was identified when I was in elementary school. When listening to this, I couldn't help but to laugh as

1. I picked the "classic" right brained shapes
2. I recognized the traits that applied to me as they were described
3. I recognized the traits that strongly applied to others around me


Not only will this help in leadership development and how to effectively work with a team, but as a mother who is beginning to homeschool 2 teenagers this will assist in evaluating the thinking styles of my children. Therefore, I will better be able to present information to them in a way that will enable them to retain and enjoy it more!

Wonderful!!!
Vincent Bamgbowu Comment by Vincent Bamgbowu on May 24, 2009 at 5:05pm
Hi
I really enjoyed Dr. Dellinger Geometric Psychology. It gave me a picture of myself most vividly and descriptive. Welldone. Keep the series on.
Michael Hejlskov Jacobsen Comment by Michael Hejlskov Jacobsen on May 18, 2009 at 5:09pm
I too enjoyed the presentation, and I too felt the match to the DISC profile. If their not the same, they most certainly must be related. Great observation!
Gail and Kumar, god work!
(sound and picture could nevertheless be in just a little bit better quality ;-) )
Tim Grammer Comment by Tim Grammer on March 14, 2009 at 4:19pm
Very interesting presentation. I greatly enjoyed it. One question I have is how well do the 4 different shapes match to the 4 different DISC profiles. It seems from a first glance that D=triangle, I=circle, S=curved line, and C=square. Would you agree?

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