Situated
Find the People and Places That Bring Out Your Best
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- Vorbestellbar
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- Erwartet am 1. Sept. 2026
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- 15,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
From the #1 bestselling author of Grit, a new book that reveals the hidden power of situations and how you can shape them to bring out your best.
In Angela Duckworth’s first book, she showed that a common denominator of successful strivers is a blend of passion and perseverance she dubbed “grit.” This second book springs from her deepening realization that grit, while necessary, is sometimes not sufficient. How you situate yourself to meet a challenge can be crucial.
Duckworth’s in-depth research reveals the enormous influence wielded by the objects within arm’s reach, your peers and mentors, and even your zip code. Though you’re often told to make the best of your situation, it is far, far better to make your situation better first.
In Situated, you’ll discover:
-Why your personality changes, sometimes dramatically, from one situation to another—and how you can harness that shift
-The secret to conquering temptation without willpower
-Why taking the less effortful path can feel like cheating but often solves a stubborn problem
-How the company you keep shapes the person you become
-The most effective ways to help others succeed
Highlighting four essential elements of successful situations, Duckworth shows how high performers like Taylor Swift, Michael Phelps, and Jerry Seinfeld create situations that make it easier to excel. And, with disarming honesty, she shares her own struggles with burnout and marriage—and how learning to change her situation, not herself, made all the difference. Whatever it is you want to achieve, there’s a situation that can make your journey easier.
It takes effort to make your situation your ally—but a little effort goes a long way...when you get situated.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
People too often attribute a lack of success to weak willpower rather than the circumstances that shape their behavior, according to this persuasive manual. Psychologist Duckworth (Grit) argues that efforts to change oneself are most effective when they begin "upstream," because situations stimulate thoughts, which in turn provoke responses, making optimizing one's surroundings easier and more proactive than "attack the motivation problem at the last possible moment." Drawing on research in self-control and behavioral change, she outlines how readers can wisely design the spaces (homes, workplaces) they spend time in, choose friends to learn from and mentors to broaden their horizons, and find work cultures that honor their values and spur growth. While some of the advice hews to familiar habit-design principles, Duckworth illustrates it with a trove of memorable examples: a snorkeling accident involving her elderly mother becomes a metaphor for recognizing when a situation is too powerful to overcome alone, while a closer look at Olympic swimmer Michael Phelps's career reveals how coaches, teammates, and facilities are essential to maximizing raw talent. Other chapters lucidly apply the same logic to marriage, parenting, leadership, exercise, studying, and resisting digital distractions. Readers of Grit will find this a useful and humane follow-up.