Hey Everyone,
I've decided that 2019 is going to be The Year of the Bucket - the year that I'm going to try to get busy and hopefully start crossing some things off my own lifelong bucket list. And so, I recently took a painting class, only to find out... that I am not a painter. I loved the challenge of mixing the paint colors into the exact shades I wanted, but filling in all the little lines, spaces, and spaces-between-the-lines was driving me crazy.
While the instructor was very encouraging, she was also very honest in that, when it comes to some artistic venues (particularly drawing,) "you either have it, or you don't." I am confident that without a doubt, whatever that "it" is, I don't have have "it."
This got me thinking about how this well-known phrase has been used in other areas of life... and in some places where it just might NOT be true.
For example, how many of you have been told, or tell yourself things such as:
- "I can't understand math/reading/science. Being smart is either something you have or you don't, and I don't have it."
- "I'll never be able make friends or find a significant other. Attracting people/making friends is just something you have, or you don't."
- "I'll never be (insert negative, crushing comment here) good enough, successful enough, pretty enough, or have enough faith. Some people have those things, and I'm just one of the ones who doesn't have them."
While it's true that some God-given talents seem to be inborn, is this true in most other areas of life as well, or not? What things are more a matter of potential that has to be shaped and practiced, rather than a whole heap of, "Well Hey There, I Guess You've Got 'It'" - whatever "it" happens to be?
I'm always disheartened to hear about people who were told that they were "slow" or "stupid" throughout their childhoods when in fact, they actually may have had a learning disorder and just needed extra time or additional/alternative instruction.
* What experiences have you had with either "having it" or not having it in areas of your life? Do you believe that most abilities are a matter of either "having it", or not"
* What things were you told you were bad at, but eventually found out that were actually pretty good at when you tried?
* What things would you like to try but hold back because you don't think you have "it"?
* How much do you think success in certain areas of life relies on having a mysterious inborn talent, or is more a matter of hard work and practice?
I'm interesting in hearing people's perspectives on how much of our talents are "just something a person has," vs. how much someone can take what they do have and run with "it".
I've decided that 2019 is going to be The Year of the Bucket - the year that I'm going to try to get busy and hopefully start crossing some things off my own lifelong bucket list. And so, I recently took a painting class, only to find out... that I am not a painter. I loved the challenge of mixing the paint colors into the exact shades I wanted, but filling in all the little lines, spaces, and spaces-between-the-lines was driving me crazy.
While the instructor was very encouraging, she was also very honest in that, when it comes to some artistic venues (particularly drawing,) "you either have it, or you don't." I am confident that without a doubt, whatever that "it" is, I don't have have "it."
This got me thinking about how this well-known phrase has been used in other areas of life... and in some places where it just might NOT be true.
For example, how many of you have been told, or tell yourself things such as:
- "I can't understand math/reading/science. Being smart is either something you have or you don't, and I don't have it."
- "I'll never be able make friends or find a significant other. Attracting people/making friends is just something you have, or you don't."
- "I'll never be (insert negative, crushing comment here) good enough, successful enough, pretty enough, or have enough faith. Some people have those things, and I'm just one of the ones who doesn't have them."
While it's true that some God-given talents seem to be inborn, is this true in most other areas of life as well, or not? What things are more a matter of potential that has to be shaped and practiced, rather than a whole heap of, "Well Hey There, I Guess You've Got 'It'" - whatever "it" happens to be?
I'm always disheartened to hear about people who were told that they were "slow" or "stupid" throughout their childhoods when in fact, they actually may have had a learning disorder and just needed extra time or additional/alternative instruction.
* What experiences have you had with either "having it" or not having it in areas of your life? Do you believe that most abilities are a matter of either "having it", or not"
* What things were you told you were bad at, but eventually found out that were actually pretty good at when you tried?
* What things would you like to try but hold back because you don't think you have "it"?
* How much do you think success in certain areas of life relies on having a mysterious inborn talent, or is more a matter of hard work and practice?
I'm interesting in hearing people's perspectives on how much of our talents are "just something a person has," vs. how much someone can take what they do have and run with "it".
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