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Is it possible for someone to not have any talent or skill they’re really good at?
First, recognize that your worth is not dependent on your abilities. Second, decide what you enjoy the most, whether you are good at it or not. Third, try to learn as much as you can about the thing you enjoy doing. Find out if there are ways of incorporating it into a career. Fourth, find out whatRead more
First, recognize that your worth is not dependent on your abilities.
See lessSecond, decide what you enjoy the most, whether you are good at it or not.
Third, try to learn as much as you can about the thing you enjoy doing. Find out if there are ways of incorporating it into a career.
Fourth, find out what steps are necessary for building competence and being allowed to work in your chosen field. Make a plan.
Fifth, develop a growth mindset. Understand that even if you aren’t a natural at something, you can use failures to learn, and you can end up developing skills over time through practice that may exceed the skills of someone who had a natural talent that they took for granted and failed to nurture. If you think of skills as things you can develop, you will likely do better than someone who thinks skills are inherent and unchangeable, because when you fail, you will keep trying instead of just hating yourself for being untalented. You will take creative risks without the fear of losing your status as one of the naturally competent ones, and those risks will help you learn even more.
You are in the rare position of having a wide range of choices. Most people get stuck trying to pursue a career in the one thing they are good at, or worse, end up doing something else while pining to do the thing they would actually be good at. You, on the other hand, have total freedom! Do something great with it, or at least go down trying!
How do I convince my daughter who’s gone to live with her boyfriend to come back home?
When kids mature they think they know what’s best for themselves and sometimes they do but it’s just not what the parents have in mind for them. Sometimes it’s what they want that they believe is best for themselves and it is, on an emotional level. We all have our lives and sadly You’re not going tRead more
When kids mature they think they know what’s best for themselves and sometimes they do but it’s just not what the parents have in mind for them. Sometimes it’s what they want that they believe is best for themselves and it is, on an emotional level. We all have our lives and sadly You’re not going to make those decisions for her. When she looks at you she sees a parental figure because that’s what you are. e.g if she was 13 and her friends started talking about how their parents always tell them what to do or how their parents don’t allow them do things, the next time you don’t allow her to do something or tell her what to do, it’s likely she’ll say you never let me do anything or you always tell me what to do even though you probably may not tell her what to do. If you act in the way those kids around her described, even for the first time in your life, she’d still think that. Parents try to label themselves as friends in, in reference to their kids. You can try but as long as your child lives on planet earth, you will never be able to remove that label from yourself; a parent. They are taught that academically and socially as well. Now here’s where rebellion comes in. Teens rebel against their parents or rather the people who they have labelled as the bosses of them. Alright, You can raise a kid to not do something and to do something but in the end, it all depends on their choice. Instead of raising a kid on what to do or what not to do, know them. I don’t mean sit them down, it has to be on their terms, on where they want to go.
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