Have realistic expectations
Sprache ist Ausdruck unserer Beziehung zu uns selbst, den anderen und zum Leben.
INHALT:
Hast du es auch schon mal bewußt gespürt, wie sich die Energie eines Menschen oder eines ganzen Raumes verändert, weil jemand präzise auf den Punkt gebracht hat, worum es gerade geht?
Wenn sich also der Vorhang zwischen Bewußten und Unbewußten für einen Moment hebt und neue Zusammenhänge dadurch klar werden können?
- Wo liegen Gesprächsfallen?
- Meine ich das, was ich sage?
- Will ich verstehen, was mein Gesprächspartner mir sagen möchte?
- Vor allem: wie gelingt es, mit dem Gefühl auseinanderzugehen, dass wir beide etwas Neues entdeckt haben?
Was wohl passieren würde, wenn wir alle immer mehr unsere Worte mit mehr Bedacht, mit dem Wunsch, einander besser verstehen zu können, wählen würden? Wenn wir uns mehr Zeit nehmen würden, hinzuhören – auf den anderen und in uns selbst?
When amazon announced the $13.7bn acquisition of Whole Foods Market in 2017, it came after some oddball attempts to strengthen its grocery business, some conceived by Jeff Bezos himself.
One was to develop an “ice-cream truck for adults”, driving into neighbourhoods with lights flashing and horns honking, to sell porterhouse steaks, Shigoku oysters, Nintendo games and other goodies. It was quietly shelved. Another was to create a product so unique that only Amazon could supply it. The answer was the “single-cow burger”, a Wagyu beef patty made from the meat of one animal. You can still find them on its website—though they are now permanently out of stock.
Amazon’s purchase of Whole Foods signalled it would take a more conventional approach to the supermarket business. That is probably why, when the deal was announced, Amazon’s share price soared and those of its rivals, such as Walmart, fell. But since then Amazon has treated grocery more like a science experiment than an exercise in seduction, with weak results at Whole Foods and in other formats. Its best-known addition to the retail experience is the “just walk out” technology in physical stores, equivalent to its one-click shopping online.
Yet cashierless supermarkets sound like something more beloved of geeks than grocers. What may cut down on time-wasting queues also minimises what some people love about shopping: the human interaction at the till, the hunter-gatherer instinct as they jostle at the meat counter, the Columbian exchange between fellow foodies at the spice rack.
Varius tellus justo odio parturient mauris curabitur lorem in. Pulvinar sit ultrices mi ut eleifend luctus ut. Id sed faucibus bibendum augue id cras purus. At eget euismod cursus non.



