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Does your job or what you studied impact the way you interact with
people, the way you see the world, and the way you make your life
decisions?
Knowing that the brain is a muscle and that it develops and changes according to what we feed it and surround ourselves with, does it make us look at things differently and have us make decisions differently? From one individual to another, our train of thought is perhaps educated more or less in the same way during our school years but the process is different. We have all learned that 2+2=4 but the process we take to get the answer is different--each school, school system, parent, etc. approaches this equation differently. For example, there are schools who teach you to memorize the equation (memorizing the times table), while some schools teach visual methods such as hand counting gestures or moving beads using an abacus. Although we might think we are educated in the same manner, deep down our brains are operating differently. We are all wired differently.
Considering what science has shown us about our complex brains, different areas of the brain are responsible for different things; but how the process happens is not as simple as a light switch in the right or left hemisphere but rather which light switches lit up, in what order, how they lit up, and every little detail of the process which i doubt science can figure that out). Again it is the process.
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So think about it, depending on our profession we allow specific parts of our brain to work more than others and make connections with other parts differently than a person who is of a different profession. So I go back to what this post is all about and say, would one engineer get along better with another engineer than a marketeer would? Are most of your friends in the same field of work? Do similar-profession-people get along better because they process ideas in almost the same way? perhaps different-minded people work best and get along best with each other.
Just something to think about.
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