Emma Bayliss
Stories (6/0)
Tips for Frenchie Owners
I grew up with a border collie and a Labrador. They were my best friends from the day I was born until my border collie Jessie died when I was 8. It was tough losing my first furry friend Shelly, but when Jessie died it was a very quiet household.
By Emma Bayliss5 years ago in Petlife
Whatever Happened to Empathy?
The most natural human emotion is love. Second to that is anger. Empathy sits somewhere in between and is just as important as the top two. As Daniel H. Pink said, "Empathy is about standing in someone else's shoes, feeling with his or her heart, seeing with his or her eyes. Not only is empathy hard to outsource and automate, but it makes the world a better place."
By Emma Bayliss5 years ago in Humans
How to Truly Compromise
"I hate the fact that people think 'compromise' is a dirty word."- Barbara Bush Comprising can be a difficult thing, especially when you've worked so hard to make up your mind and validate your opinion. Compromising with a loved one is easier, but can still lead to arguments and feeling like one of you hadn't gotten what they wanted.
By Emma Bayliss5 years ago in Humans
Four Simple Ways or Rules to Lose Weight
Over-complicated diets, rigorous exercise regimes and models all over Instagram give us, as women, a complex in more ways than one. To be the perfect mum, colleague, friend, girlfriend, exercise buddy, wife, we need to keep on top of our lives, and more than likely the lives of our partners, children, dogs, bosses and anyone else who'd like us to look after them, frankly.
By Emma Bayliss5 years ago in Longevity
Am I Too Young to Do This?
In my first job after uni I had "gut-feelings" about challenges or short-comings in the marketing department. I couldn't put my finger on the problem and I didn't know what I didn't know. So I tried to fix it, fell on my face, and figured out the hard way how NOT to be constructive or helpful. It wasn't appreciated from someone who didn't know what they were talking about. In other words, I was too young to have an opinion or to be taken seriously.
By Emma Bayliss6 years ago in Journal
Why You’re Stuck
Now let me specify here who I’m talking about. To some degree, everybody gets a bit lost in their life and hopefully manages to find their way back. But here, here I am talking about the late teens/twenty somethings working part-time, no quite sure what they want to do with their lives and floating about from one job to the next getting enough money that month to pay a bill, rent to the parents, and a bit of spare money for drinking and having fun.
By Emma Bayliss6 years ago in Motivation