Skip to content
Home » The Bottom Line TV Interview with Mary J. Lore

The Bottom Line TV Interview with Mary J. Lore

Mary Interviewed on The Bottom Line


When my book Managing Thought was first published in 2008, I sat down with Cindy Cainz on her 30-minute talk show, the Bottom Line.

Cindy asked a lot of great questions on how to apply concepts in the book. For your convenience, the interview is divided into a 5-part series. Enjoy!


How to Become Aware of our Thoughts

Many people don’t imagine that in one moment we can change the course of our life, work, and organizations by changing the way we choose to think. In this video clip, from the series of Mary Lore’s interview with Cindy Kainz on her show The Bottom Line, Mary talks about the process to become aware, key indicators, and how we can realize a thought is just a thought.


How To Resist Negative Thoughts

With practice, we stop living in fight, flight, or freeze and start living — in thankfulness, wonder, and possibility. In this interview segment with Cindy Kainz on The Bottom Line, Mary Lore discusses ways we can resist “negative” habitual, counter-productive thoughts and train our brains to think powerfully.


How To Practice Positive Thoughts

In this segment of an interview Mary Lore did with Cindy Kainz on her show The Bottom Line, she shares how positive thinking and thinking “happy” thoughts might not work and how we can re-frame “positive” thoughts to make them powerful.


How To Manage Thoughts

In this segment of Mary Lore’s interview with Cindy Kainz on her show The Bottom Line, she reveals how no matter if we’re 12 or several times that age, we can all benefit and live the life we intend through thought management.


How To Choose Powerful Thoughts

Thinking powerful thoughts takes practice as Mary Lore discusses in the last segment of this video series and in her book and audio book Managing Thought. In this segment, with Cindy Kainz on her show The Bottom Line, Mary talks about tools we can use and approaches we can take to choose powerful thoughts.