Whenever you gossip, remember this!

You know we spend all 52 minutes a day discussing someone else? In short, on average, an hour a day left us gossiping. Though the inevitable phenomenon, we have been historically told that gossip is not good for us and that as a quality, there is no connection with [...]
You know we spend all 52 minutes a day discussing someone else? In short, on average, an hour a day left us gossiping. Although the inevitable phenomenon, we have been historically told that gossiping, speaking ill of us, and quality of fiction.
What if we say that experts have recently concluded that people can benefit from this process if they take good advantage of it! If we gossip about someone, we do it for a reason.
California University psychologists, after the experiments were first discovered, spend 52 minutes a day talking about others, but only 15% of these rumors are negative.
In addition, another fact is that men tend to gossip as much as women and that extremists talk more about others than themselves. Young people are the ones who gossip more negative than the old and why the stereotype that exists says otherwise.
Researchers say that gossip today is considered the means each one uses to collect information needed to protect himself. Among other things, gossip helps us to be selective in our social environment and to know how to interact with others.
And that 15% negative rumor, at the end of the day, it's good for us.
Why? When we learn that people have spoken back and forth about any of our qualities or behavior, we need to reflect. At first, we may feel hurt or frustrated, but if we analyze and improve, this rumor has done us good!
So, finally: Being gossipy to a certain extent is not bad, but be careful not to spoil the balances.










