Being blind and my father died when I was 13 was a moment in many ways of freedom for me. So the obvious careers for an Indian girl, or considered to be off the table. My mom had no idea what a blind person could do. She just knew that I needed to stand up on my own two feet. The American system says, book, I'm not going to track you into a particular way of living at such an early age. That's a system we've stolen from the Brits.
We speak with Sheena Iyengar, an expert in the science of choice. Iyengar provides practical steps for generating big ideas by drawing from recent advances in neuro- and cognitive sciences. She upends the myth that only a select few can come up with revolutionary ideas and offers an evidence-backed method for anyone looking to innovate and solve complex problems.
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