I’m revealing the new method to finally help women take their rightful place in their environment!
You think this is going to be complicated? Not at all.
It’s super simple.
It doesn’t exist.
Yep, that headline hook was just to illustrate the problem.
But maybe soon, because there’s a trend growing:
a “method” for every little problem in your life.
And faced with that, a sharp entrepreneur will build you an app.
I can totally picture it:
You type your problem into a search bar (“I procrastinate,” “I feel guilty,” “I lack motivation”) and boom — it spits out the method that fits.
Complete with a pastel infographic and a Gandhi quote.
Imagine a world where an app helps you directly:
Want to learn something complex?
➡️ Try the Feynman method: explain it to someone… even if you haven’t really grasped it yourself. You’ll become a LinkedIn prodigy.
Your colleague keeps interrupting you in a meeting?
➡️ Use the DESC method to assert yourself gently.
Your teenager never tidies their room?
➡️ Apply the 70/30 method: 70% listening, 30% threatening to cut the Wi‑Fi.
Thinking about a career change?
➡️ Ikigai awaits. Whatever your context, your “inner fire” is apparently in there somewhere.
Struggling to concentrate?
➡️ Set a timer and try the Pomodoro method. Just remember to turn off notifications first.
Doubting yourself?
➡️ It’s probably your impostor syndrome. Good news: there’s a TEDx for that.
Got 14 to‑do lists and not a single item ticked off?
➡️ Test the GTD method: a to‑do to organize your other to‑dos. Simple.
Having trouble setting a goal?
➡️ Think SMART: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Realistic, Time‑bound. (Or at least achievable, to start with.)
Hesitating to take action?
➡️ Count down with the 5‑Second Rule. No, it’s not stressful — it’s “efficient.”
Want to ask a question without influencing the other person?
➡️ Try Clean Language. Just don’t end up interrogating yourself about your own wording.
🧭 So yes, a method can help — but without context, without understanding, and without mastery, don’t expect a miracle.
And sometimes, it’s not about the method at all.
It’s about how you make it your own, how you adjust it, how you explore with it — and how you know when to let go.
Because neither you, nor your teenager, fit into a PDF.