The Creative Power of Failure
The next time you face a failure, don’t just crumble, wallow in self-pity or lose your confidence.
There’re many ways of doing something.
The next time you face a failure, don’t just crumble, wallow in self-pity or lose your confidence.
There’re many ways of doing something.
The best way to learn is by ‘doing’.
So how do you begin? Get your reluctant teen to sign up for volunteer work, get involved in a community cause.
Survival is instinctive. But that instinct gets eroded with all the comforts at home. Teaching them a few basic skills shows that you love them enough to want to make their lives comfortable and them, independent.
‘No’ is a powerful word, capable of building their confidence, reinforcing their self-worth. But that one little word is equally capable of destroying it all.
In your attempt to hone their every skill, you’re restricting their lives to a packed routine with various classes and activities. They’ll surely learn different things but not be engaged enough to excel in any of them.
Being able to hold the attention of the audience is an art. A person who can do that is often the cause of envy for others.
It’s that simple yet not many have understood how to work it.
What every parent must remember is that the child is not them, but an extension of them; an individual in its own ways. The process gets easier if you accept this truth at the earliest.
Being outdoors, exploring nature, spending time in the open can be both a learning and humbling experience. And don’t even start with the long list of benefits that come with it.