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3-Minute Reframe with Cameron Conaway

Podkast av Cameron Conaway

engelsk

Teknologi og vitenskap

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Les mer 3-Minute Reframe with Cameron Conaway

Each week, host Cameron Conaway shares a lens that helps him live with more clarity and courage. No noise. Just thoughts from a professor, meditator, and former MMA fighter who believes feedback is the secret to improving in everything. Cameron distills his unique background into sharp, impactful episodes — a reframed perspective on something can change your life, and you might get that in one episode of 3MR.

Alle episoder

29 Episoder

episode How Layoffs Changed Us cover

How Layoffs Changed Us

In 2025, Cameron Conaway was leading one of the best teams of his career at Cisco when the company announced it was laying off 4,000 people. What followed wasn't just grief — it was a quiet, almost invisible shift in behavior. He stopped taking risks. Some colleagues stopped asking for feedback entirely. Others asked for it performatively, hoping visibility would protect them. In this episode of 3-Minute Reframe, he connects that experience to a landmark 1981 paper by Barry Staw, Lance Sandelands, and Jane Dutton on threat rigidity — and explores why a threat environment is often the exact moment we become least able to give or receive honest feedback. Show Notes: Threat-Rigidity Effects in Organizational Behavior — Staw, Sandelands & Dutton (1981) [https://www.jstor.org/stable/2392337] 3-Minute Reframe Archive [https://cameronconaway.com/3mr/]

21. mai 2026 - 2 min
episode The Goo Stage cover

The Goo Stage

"Is everything alright?" That's what a Chief Marketing Officer asked Cameron before delivering feedback that rattled his ego and left him disoriented in ways he couldn't explain. He didn't have language for what happened next. Virginia Satir did. In the 1970s, family therapist Virginia Satir mapped something she kept seeing in the families she worked with: change doesn't move in a straight line. After a foreign element arrives — a piece of feedback, a job loss, a diagnosis, a conversation that changes everything — what follows isn't smooth transition. It's chaos. Performance drops. Clarity disappears. You may feel less capable than before the change began. And then there's the butterfly. Inside the chrysalis, a caterpillar doesn't gradually transform — it dissolves completely into goo. A cellular soup of pure chaos. It is, for a time, neither caterpillar nor butterfly. That dissolution isn't a sign something went wrong. It's the biological prerequisite for what comes next. The reframe: if you're in the middle of something that feels unresolved right now, consider the possibility that you're not failing to change. You may simply be in the goo. Show Notes: Download the Satir Change Model [https://cameronconaway.com/change-management/#frameworks] The Satir Model (Satir et al., 1991) [https://www.amazon.com/Satir-Model-Family-Therapy-Beyond/dp/0831400781] Giving Feedback for Impact After Receipt [https://cameronconaway.com/blog/giving-feedback-iar/]

30. april 2026 - 3 min
episode The 90-Second Rule of Emotions cover

The 90-Second Rule of Emotions

Have you ever felt an emotion that seemed to last all day — long after the moment that triggered it had passed? In this episode, Cameron shares the story of one of the worst presentations of his life — a packed room, a disaster on stage, and an embarrassment that followed him into the shower and stayed for days. It took years to understand why. Harvard-trained neuroanatomist Jill Bolte Taylor documented something remarkable while studying her own stroke in real time: the physiological lifespan of an emotion is approximately 90 seconds. The chemicals flood your body, peak, and flush out. After that, if the feeling persists, it's because we're choosing — consciously or not — to keep retriggering it. The reframe: the next time a feeling hits hard, ask yourself — am I still feeling this, or am I now feeding it? Show Notes: Taylor, J.B. (2008). My Stroke of Insight. Viking. [https://amzn.to/3Qg7BNG] Related: Somatic Literacy [https://cameronconaway.com/somatic-literacy/]

23. april 2026 - 3 min
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