The PM says he’ll be less like a bulldozer if re-elected, but it’s only going to happy if he really means it. |OPINION JennaPrice AusPol AusVotes
, I had free access to a massive coaching team: nutritionist, exercise physiologist, food coach on the sidelines alternately cheering, sympathising, urging. I had to change my brain and really, I don’t think that’s happened. I’ve resisted nightly chocolate for 13 years, but I still crave that velvety darkness, that tang of peel beneath. Or Cadbury’s.
“When you are chasing your personality change, you are behaving in ways that are outside of your norm.” “The challenge in this case,” says Platow, “is knowing whether or not he has the capacity in and of himself.” The challenge for those who want Morrison to change is that there are just as many who don’t.
This is a good question. How about : Talk less. Smile more. Don’t let them know what you’re against or what you’re for. If that’s the only challenge, says Platow, then that’s easy done. But what about saying less frequently: “It’s not my job” or “I don’t hold hose, mate.”It reminds Platow of Australia’s 27th prime minister Julia Gillard’s attempt to be more human, less stage-managed, the real Julia. He understands why she said what she said.
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