My sliding scale I charge for coaching on a sliding scale, based on Alexis J. Cunningfolk’s “green bottles.” Learn how it works here.
Ways to find a therapist If you want help managing a specific mental-health diagnosis (as I do), or if you need to pay for support using health insurance, then you need a clinical mental-health practitioner — not a coach like me. Here are some suggestions for finding a clinician that works for you.
A do-it-yourself introduction to your inner family You don’t need a coach or a therapist to start getting to know your own internal family. If you’re curious about the different parts of yourself, you can start exploring your inner world using this easy-to-read book. That’s what I did myself.
Crisis resources These free, confidential resources are just right when you need a trained person to talk to right away.
Making meaning visible Making lucid sense of a big mess of information is one of my favorite things to do. Here are some of the ways I help my consulting clients make the meaning of their work visible.
Book review: The 3 things only leaders can do Although its stated ambitions are more modest, Real Flow amounts to a quiet manifesto for a new model of work — one that begins by putting human wellbeing first, not only as an ethical principle but as a simple fact about how organizations operate.
“Bound together by the love of the game” As our media landscape fractures into countless paywalled gardens of proprietary “content,” is there a future for live sports at all? An upstart tech CEO says yes — but only if sports and media leaders return to the values of real-world belonging that turn fans into communities.