Books
Tiz A. Arnold

Why didn't somebody tell me this sooner

  • svit14081982has quoted4 hours ago
    you want to do your thing really well, your focus has to be on the thing you’re actually doing in the present moment.
  • Arabella Izwandyhas quotedyesterday
    You need to make decisions that are your own and that are best for you and what you want for yourself.
  • Arabella Izwandyhas quotedyesterday
    You need to be the person you want to be
  • Arabella Izwandyhas quotedyesterday
    You need to stop going through the motions (in school, in your beliefs, in sports, in friendships) and really show up. You need to make decisions that are your own and that are best for you and what you want for yourself. You need
  • svit14081982has quoted2 days ago
    That’s the first step in becoming great at anything—put in the (focused, giving it everything you have, work your butt off) training doing the thing, whether it be a sport, art, playing an instrument, or anything else. Most people probably know that, even if they (like me) never consider it a real possibility for themselves.
  • svit14081982has quoted3 days ago
    most important thing to remember is that learning requires effort—the harder you have to work while studying, the more likely it is that your brain will hold onto the information permanently, not just until the test is over. Here are some tips:
  • svit14081982has quoted3 days ago
    What I wish somebody had told me back then is don’t worry about good grades, worry about learning. If your goal is to learn, the good grades will probably come; but if your goal is to get good grades, you’ll never truly learn. (A disclaimer: This doesn’t mean it’s okay to get bad grades because you just refuse to study. It does mean it’s okay to get the occasional bad grade because, let’s say, you got creative when doing an assignment and it didn’t turn out as planned or your teacher didn’t appreciate your creativity but you learned some valuable lesson in the process.)
  • svit14081982has quoted4 days ago
    ad person in general.
    So what should we learn from this? First, don’t label people. What you saw or heard that’s tempting you to label a whole group of people actually only applies to the person or people that did or said the thing, not the whole group. Second, when you’re tempted to write off something or someone as just being the exception to your belief (in other words, to let your brain take its shortcut even when there’s evidence that it’s wrong), ask yourself if your belief might need some reevaluating and potentially some adjusting—or if it’s just flat out wrong.
  • svit14081982has quoted10 days ago
    Just because you’re not good at something now does not mean it’s not for you. It doesn’t mean you should quit. If it’s something you want or need to be
  • svit14081982has quoted10 days ago
    good at, you can achieve that—but you’ll have to work really hard for it and probably for a really long time. Instead of thinking, “I’m just not good at this,”
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