You were born influential. But then you were taught to suppress that power, to follow the rules, to wait your turn, to not make waves. Zoe Chance, author of "Influence is Your Superpower," seeks to explain how you can rediscover the power that brings great ideas to life.
It's about giving that power to everybody, not just left in the hands of the power-hungry people in this world, Chance told Steve Tarter.
The author explained that the brain has two systems, one that makes an immediate, intuitive response and the other works on a more thoughtful response.
Chance calls that first system the gator, using the analogy on alligators she observed at Gatorland in Florida. "What you notice is how lazy they are," she said. Alligators won't bite on a chunk of meat thrown by them being creatures that can go a long time without eating, said Chance.
"Their dominant response is to ignore the situation," she said. The judge, on the other hand, represents a reasoned, thoughtful approach to a problem. But the problem is that, typically, people use the gator response 95 percent of the time, said Chance, whose class at Yale University is one of the most popular on campus.
After all, who doesn't want to be influential.2
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