In a team situation, I think the players are more inclined to give the answer they believe the psychologist is looking for rather than maybe being totally honest.
I've been giving interviews for the last 25 or 30 years, more often than not answering the same questions over and over again, ad nauseum.
Panic does not help, even if you are unable to answer. Try to ask questions to the interviewers as well and it should be impressive enough.
For men, the answer was always the same and never farther away than the nearest sword. For a woman, a mother, the way was stonier and harder to know.
Golf is a puzzle without an answer. I've played the game for 40 years and I still haven't the slightest idea how to play.
Clients say, 'What's your strategy,' and I say, 'Ask me what I believe first.' That's a far more enduring answer.
The answer scrawled on a blank page in a daily newspaper, was conceived whilst aboard a ferry.
When it comes to reforming MPs' expenses, the answer is simply to keep it simple: show us receipts as they're claimed and, where there are abuses, enforce the law.
I'm no genius, and others can outwork me. What I do is ask the naive, honest questions, and then I'm not satisfied until I get the answers.
You better arm yourselves to answer your children's and grandchildren's questions... no matter what the question is... without being judgmental.
I think I have sort of gravitated toward issues that I don't know the answers to, because that's what's more interesting for me to write.
I think you could ask 10 English people the same question about class and get a very different answer.
When I believe in something, I'm very passionate. I don't take 'no' for an answer.
If we would answer the question of the existence of the Evil then we would not be sinners, we could make something else responsible.
I'm very specific and ambitious in plotting out my goals and never take no for an answer - so it's not like things just fall in my lap.
My wife asked me once if I weren't a comedian what I would do. I couldn't answer the question. I never imagined doing anything else.
With Google I'm starting to burn out on knowing the answer to everything. People in the year 2020 are going to be nostalgic for the sensation of feeling clueless.
Make your goals big and broad enough so that they never become answered prayers and boomerang to curse you.
So often we focus on finding answers to life's mysteries... when in reality, a wiser approach is to start asking better questions, and more of them.
In addition to demanding answers and accountability from the Veterans Administration, Congress had to act to ensure veterans do not suffer because of the actions of a federal agency.
I started realizing that I wasn't so dumb; rather, most people simply didn't know the answers to the questions that I was interested in-or they didn't care.