Think about how often you hold back honest opinions of someone else because you don’t want to hurt their feelings. But there are times when this well-intended restraint can be a mistake. This week, in the second part of our series on failure and feedback, psychologist Taya Cohen helps us understand when — and how — to be honest.
If you missed the first part of our series — which focuses on how we can become better at learning from difficult or negative feedback — you can find it here.
Just Sex
Where Happiness Hides
You 2.0: Regrets, I Have a Few...
You 2.0: Did That Really Happen?
You 2.0: When Did Marriage Become So Hard?
You 2.0: In the Heat of the Moment
You 2.0: Cultivating Your Purpose
Losing Alaska
Stage Fright
Playing the Gender Card
You, But Better
The Influence You Have
What Twins Tell Us
The Power of Apologies
The Power of Mercy
What are the Odds?
This is Your Brain on Ads
Why We Hold on to Things
Loss and Renewal
Tribes and Traitors
Create your
podcast in
minutes
It is Free
My Unsung Hero
A Slight Change of Plans
No Stupid Questions
Code Switch
Freakonomics Radio