I'm a legal scholar (aspiring solicitor) with practical skills in legal writing and research (case law). However, my true passion lies in observing the people around me, as I have developed the ability of active listening (empathy). The quote by Albert Einstein: "I have no special talent. I am only passionately curious" aptly describes me. I'm also ✓ student of Law/OUC in Cypriot Legal System (mixed system of civil law and common law), within the broader environment of international law and the law of the European Union, ✓ student of Psychology/UEL in Psychology Science (psychological theories and research), student member of the BPS and ✓ Greek Teacher; recognition in the Greek Government Gazette Issue: 1430/B'/30.4.2012 & 862/Β'/8.4.2014. With teaching competence of greek language teacher (abroad) as level B2 "good knowledge" through the program "Routes in teaching greek as a foreign language outside Greece" by Greek Language Center, which supports and qualitative promotes teaching and learning greek as a foreign language to children and adults worldwide (except for Greece) under supervision of the Greek Ministry of Education.
𝓼𝓊𝓃𝓼𝓮𝓉
019087729™

― "People are just as wonderful as sunsets if I can let them be. In fact, perhaps the reason we can truly appreciate a sunset is that we cannot control it. When I look at a sunset, [...] I don't find myself saying, "Soften the orange a little on the right hand corner, and put a bit more purple along the base, and use a little more pink in the cloud color." I don't do that. I don’t try to control a sunset. I watch it with awe as it unfolds. Ι like myself best when I can appreciate my staff member [...] in this same way."
• Carl Rogers (1980). A way of being, p.22, HMH Publisher.
A way of being
𝓼𝓊𝓃𝓻𝓪𝓬𝓮
20250214

― "Every experience has its own horizon; every experience has its core of actual and determinate cognition, its own content of immediate determinations which give themselves; but beyond this core of determinate quiddity, of the truly given as "itself there," it has its own horizon. This implies that every experience refers to the possibility [...] of obtaining, little by little as experience continues, new determinations of the same thing. [...] And this horizon in its indeterminateness is copresent from the beginning as a realm of possibilities, as the prescription of the path to a more precise determination, in which only experience itself decides in favor of the determinate possibility it realizes as opposed to others."
• Edmund Husserl (1939). Experience and judgment, p.32, NU Press Ed.1973.
Experience and judgment
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― "I'm not smart, but I like to observe. Millions saw the apple fall, but Newton was the one who asked why."
• William Hazlitt