Rethinkography: Like a Sunset – The Art of Letting Go and Starting Anew

What it’s all about

The cover picture, a moody sunset, invites us to reflect on transitions, which carry deep significance not only in nature but also in our lives and work. The softly fading colours, the dissolution of light as it prepares the sky for the approaching darkness, symbolise the necessity of conscious change, of letting go and renewal – central aspects of self-management. This metaphor provides us with a window into the realm of Rethinking, the active re-evaluation of habits, patterns, and structures that hold us back in both personal and professional contexts.

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Rethinkography: The Path of Clear Boundaries in Self-Management

What it’s all about

In the realm of self-management, where we constantly refine our navigation through both professional and personal challenges, the ability to set clear boundaries is invaluable. The uploaded image – a surveillance camera next to a no-entry sign – offers a symbolic foundation for this essential topic: the establishment of barriers to safeguard our resources and energies, alongside the continual self-observation required to ensure we are not trapped in habitual patterns.

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Rethinkography: A New Perspective on Flexibility and Resilience in Self-Management

What it’s all about

At first glance, the image seems to show nothing more than a series of bollards, but upon closer inspection, it conveys a powerful metaphor for human self-management and coping with the uncertainties of life. All the bollards stand upright, rigid and unmoving—except one. This tilted bollard breaks the pattern, no longer standing straight like the others and appearing damaged at first. Yet it is in this apparent deviation that the essence of a deep insight into self-management and life leadership becomes clear.

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Rethinkography: Reclaiming Wholeness – A Rethinking Strategy for Personal and Professional Fulfilment

What it is about

The image, depicting a headless mannequin with the phrase “Up to 50% off,” presents a powerful metaphor for the challenges and questions faced in self-management. The mannequin without a head or expression symbolises the loss of identity, often experienced when people lack clear direction in life or work. Coupled with the sales message “up to 50% off,” another, deeper image emerges: the discount signifies a reduction in self-worth or the feeling of only using a portion of one’s potential. This visual composition brings us to an important aspect of self-management: the loss of wholeness and the exchange and valuation of resources.

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Rethinkography: The Forgotten Self – A Rethinking of Identity and Perception in Self-Management

What it’s about

In the realm of self-management, one of the most neglected yet critical aspects is the cultivation and protection of one’s sense of self. The image provided, a mannequin’s face with its detached gaze, serves as a haunting metaphor for the danger of becoming emotionally disconnected, not just from others but from ourselves. It speaks to the phenomenon where individuals, especially in the professional sphere, develop a perfected external persona, a mask, while their inner world — their true identity, emotional needs, and sense of self — fades into an undefined backdrop. This separation between the external presentation and internal reality can be detrimental, both to one’s personal fulfillment and professional success.

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Rethinkography: The Philosophy of Clearing the Clutter

What it’s all about

Standing at the crossroads between self-management and the metaphors of urban life, this image – a barren sidewalk, strewn with empty boxes and overlooked utility cabinets covered in graffiti – serves as a fitting canvas for a Rethinking lesson that penetrates the core of our modern existence. The casual word “Honey” scrawled across the wall, seemingly unrelated to the chaos beneath it, pulls our attention. It is a signifier, simultaneously detached and intimate, atop a scene of abandonment, signifying the juxtaposition that often inhabits our minds and lives. The walls we construct around our routines, our unspoken fears, and our desires – much like this corner of the city – are often left to accumulate unnoticed clutter.

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