How
many of you, when you were born, already knew how to speak? How to read? How to
count numbers? How to do calculus? Or how to make an app?
No
one. Yes?
A
few months ago, someone came up to me and said, “You know what, I’m gifted!”
I
asked, “Why do you say so?”
“When
I was born I know one thing no one taught me to do,” he replied.
“Really?”
I asked in a very attentive look, “What is it?”
I
was waiting for him to say “Oh when I went out from the womb of my mother I
instantly said ‘Mam-ma,” or “I did the action song of Twinkle Twinkle,
close-open my two hands.”
And
he said, “I knew how to cry.”
Curiosity:
A Learning Skill of a Child
When
we were a toddler, most of the time, we asked so many questions. We were
curious about the things around us. Sometimes
we asked so many questions that we tend to annoy the ones we were asking.
But
that's the good thing about young children. They don’t worry if
the question is foolish. They just ask. They don’t worry whether they will look dumb trying
something new. They just do it. As a result, they learn.
And
that’s basically a need for us to grow: Curiosity.
Curious
people possess a thirst for knowledge. They live in a constant state of wanting
to learn more. Author and speaker John Maxwell said, “Curiosity helps a person
to think and expand possibilities beyond the ordinary. Asking why? fires the imagination. It leads to
discovery.”
So
why are there some people who have stopped growing and wasn’t able to move on
with their lives?
Pride.
These
are people who don’t have a beginner’s mindset and are the know-it-alls. They
see themselves as experts. They’ve began to answer more than ask. And when they
do, you can be sure they’ve slowed down in their growth and have lost the fire
for personal growth.
Author
John Naisbitt believes that “the most important skill to acquire is learning
how to learn.”
That
is why I made a decision to have a teachable spirit. I realized that all the
wisdom I need are available in this world.
As
John Wooden said, “Everything we know we learned from someone else.”
All
we have is to do is to acknowledge the need, ask, learn to listen and enjoy
life.
I love it when John Maxwell said, “Perhaps the greatest way to
remain curious and keep growing is to enjoy life. I believe it honors God when
we enjoy life and live it well. That means taking risks – sometimes failing,
sometimes succeeding, but always learning."
In
his commencement speech in Stanford, Steve Jobs ended it with a line, “Stay
hungry, stay foolish.”
Have
a teachable attitude.
Thumbs up! :)
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