ad:tech Over, Ranting to Resume

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A Happy ad:tech Couple

OK. We’re back. It was fun. We learned a lot. We met a lot of new people and had great fun with friends. We cruised the exhibit hall floor. We attended and reported on tons of informative sessions. And we didn’t sleep just so you could vicariously party hop with us.

You heard all about it here but there was a three day gap in our usual rantings so today, albeit a bit late, we’re back at it. Stay tuned as we poor through all those tips you’ve sent us over the past few days and serve them up with our usual flair.

Picture of Steve Hall

Steve Hall

RECENT ARTICLES

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Psychology says the people who obsessively pack and repack their bags the night before a trip aren’t anxious — they’re processing something much older than travel

Psychology says the people who obsessively pack and repack their bags the night before a trip aren’t anxious — they’re processing something much older than travel

Global English Editing

Nobody tells you that pain doesn’t just change what you feel. It changes what you notice. After real loss, you start seeing grief in strangers’ faces at the grocery store, hearing exhaustion in your friend’s laugh, catching the micro-hesitation before someone says ‘I’m fine.’ Pain gave you a fluency you never asked for and can never unlearn

Nobody tells you that pain doesn’t just change what you feel. It changes what you notice. After real loss, you start seeing grief in strangers’ faces at the grocery store, hearing exhaustion in your friend’s laugh, catching the micro-hesitation before someone says ‘I’m fine.’ Pain gave you a fluency you never asked for and can never unlearn

Global English Editing

Most people don’t realize that the ache of loneliness isn’t actually about being alone – neuroscientists say it’s the brain’s alarm system detecting that you’re cut off from the kind of reciprocal attention humans need to regulate their nervous system

Most people don’t realize that the ache of loneliness isn’t actually about being alone – neuroscientists say it’s the brain’s alarm system detecting that you’re cut off from the kind of reciprocal attention humans need to regulate their nervous system

Global English Editing

I retired at 62 with plenty of money and a beautiful home, but I kept decorating it for guests who never came — until I realized I had built an entire life designed to impress people who weren’t actually paying attention

I retired at 62 with plenty of money and a beautiful home, but I kept decorating it for guests who never came — until I realized I had built an entire life designed to impress people who weren’t actually paying attention

Global English Editing

Psychology says people with genuinely strong self-worth don’t constantly affirm themselves — they operate through quiet patterns that most people mistake for aloofness or indifference

Psychology says people with genuinely strong self-worth don’t constantly affirm themselves — they operate through quiet patterns that most people mistake for aloofness or indifference

Global English Editing

Most people don’t realize that adults without children aren’t avoiding responsibility—they’re carrying a different kind. Research shows they become the unseen infrastructure of everyone else’s family, and that role is both chosen and completely invisible

Most people don’t realize that adults without children aren’t avoiding responsibility—they’re carrying a different kind. Research shows they become the unseen infrastructure of everyone else’s family, and that role is both chosen and completely invisible

Global English Editing