Why do you always have to have big plans? Nuthawut Somsuk / Getty Images/iStockphoto
Often seen as a yardstick that measures an individual’s vitality, whether a project is a driving force or an additional directive. Psychosociologist Jean-Pierre Boutinet helps us think about this race that drives us to be the best… or not.
Is everyday life bearable if it is not supported by a dream project? Big or small, two or ten, our projects are the keepers we build around… If they don’t outrun us. Renovate a house, buy a cabin in the woods, think about breeding Labradors, start a publishing company or take the road to Compostela… They follow each other and are not alike. There are children’s and educational programs. plans for life as a couple or for retirement; policy for large projects or establishment projects. The work of the project manager is also available. It is hard to imagine that the concept of the project actually emerged only from the 1980s in its current sense, replacing American and liberal conceptions of goals that were more pragmatic and short-term. Jean-Pierre Boutinet, psychosociologist and professor emeritus of the Catholic University of the West (Angers), is the anthropologist of the project…
Source: Le Figaro
