How to Be a Perfect Person
/Both pursuing perfection and having too much self-acceptance can cause problems that prevent you from achieving true happiness. Blend the two, and have it both ways.
Read MoreBoth pursuing perfection and having too much self-acceptance can cause problems that prevent you from achieving true happiness. Blend the two, and have it both ways.
Read MorePeople sometimes adopt an adversarial attitude toward the aspects of themselves that they don’t like. But if you consider what gives rise to unpleasant feelings and behaviors, they can teach you, and take you to new heights of well-being.
Read MoreMany people, even those who seem successful, feel burned out, stuck, and unfulfilled on the inside. They long for meaning, purpose, and deep happiness—something more than fleeting pleasure. Here's how to do it, even if you're worried that it's too late.
Read MoreGrab your FREE Setback Survival Pack for proven mind and body techniques for tapping into your innate calm, wisdom, and resilience.
I’ll help you bounce back from even the most difficult, disruptive events, to a whole new baseline of clarity, confidence, strength, and happiness.
Jim Hjort is a Los Angeles personal development coach, resilience coach, and executive coach.
He trains people in how to rebound from setbacks to achieve new levels of functioning and happiness. He also helps people who feel burned out or stuck to feel energized, empowered, and fulfilled.
In his organizational coaching and corporate coaching practices, he helps companies achieve business results by avoiding burnout and unlocking their organization’s engagement, creativity, productivity, and potential.
Jim's approach is based on the latest research and theory in psychology, neurobiology, sociology, and other life and social sciences.
Check out my free 28-page guide. You'll discover how to leave behind feelings of burnout and stagnation and start feeling energized, empowered, and fulfilled.
You can start thriving from the inside out, right now, and it has to do with science, not metaphysics. (And there's more to it than "work-life balance.")