There's there's this moment of generosity that you display where mangola offers you bread after your dance, and you end up sharing it with the girls that are around you. Do you know i look tedo bred and a, and i wanted to gobble it up. And then i looked up and i said to myself, noway. And i shared the bread. That's how we slapped. There were very little spaces between us, so we really had to co operate, not compete. I think it's very important to think about your thinking. Got to change your thinking and look at the problem as a challenge andLook at the crisis of the transition.
You can follow the show at @DrMayaShankar on Instagram.
Edith Eger was just 16 years old when the Nazis forced her and her Jewish family onto a cattle car to the Auschwitz concentation camp. Today, Edith is 94 years old, and a psychologist who specializes in post-traumatic stress disorder. She shares how learning to control her own mind helped her to survive the Holocaust.
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