Learning Lab
Practical strategies, tools, AI and techniques to help you learn faster, think smarter and build valuable skills.
How Do You Know When It’s Time to Change Careers
When Your Career No Longer Fits There is an uncomfortable question that appears sooner or later in many professional lives: am I still in the right place, or have I simply become used to being here? At first, it usually feels like a small sensation. Something difficult to explain. You do not necessarily hate your […]
The Toxic Boss Playbook
When the Problem Is Not the Job, but the Person Running It Most people think they hate their job when, in reality, what is destroying their energy is something else: the person running the environment. And there is a massive difference between the two. A difficult job can teach you a lot. A toxic boss, […]
Why Information Alone Doesn’t Lead to Learning
Why Having Information Is Not the Same as Learning I have no doubt about it. We live in a time where information is instantly available. We can search for almost anything and get an answer in seconds. That has completely changed how we access knowledge. However, the problem is that access is not the same […]
What AI Is Quietly Changing About Learning
AI Is Not Just Changing How We Learn Most people talk about AI as a tool that can do everything and may take many of our jobs. But it also provides instant summaries, simplified explanations, and constant assistance. All of that is true. But the most important change is not speed. It is the relationship […]
Why Convenience Is Making Us Mentally Lazy
When Convenience Replaces Mental Effort To be honest, I used to see convenience as a form of progress. Less effort, more speed, better tools. Everything optimized. Sounds great, right? But there is a cost that is not always obvious. And in our case, even if it sounds exaggerated, it has consequences. Still, I don’t think […]
Unlearning: The Hardest Part of Learning
Unlearning Hurts More Than Learning Unlearning, well… what can I say. For a long time, I thought learning meant adding new things. More information, more ideas, more techniques. But over time, I realized that what was holding me back the most wasn’t what I didn’t know, but everything I thought I knew and no longer […]
