English, asked by hitanshsharma27, 15 hours ago

3 There It easier are ways to make it easier

Answers

Answered by tvtvtcrcsxec
1

When I was 16, like many other teenagers, I learned how to drive. I took a driving course using a standard transmission vehicle, and it was hard. I stalled all the time. I rolled down hills, stalled in the car wash, and even accidentally drove the car through the back of my parent’s garage. It was hard.

Pretty soon though, it got a little easier, and then it was no big thing.

Thinking about that made me wonder about all of the things we don’t start because they are hard, and all of the things I thought that would be hard that are easy now.

I thought it would be hard to …

Change my diet. When I was diagnosed with MS, I changed my diet to reduce inflammation in my body. I became a vegetarian and the beginning was hard. Reading books and spending time with other people who supported my new diet change made the process easier and soon, it became my new normal.

Pare my wardrobe down to 33 items. When I challenged myself to create a capsule wardrobe with 33 items for 3 months, I thought it would be so hard. I thought it would be hard to box things up, hard to choose only 33 items, and hard to explain to people what I was doing. The reality is that it wasn’t hard at all. I spent more time thinking about how hard it would be than experiencing it. Today is the first day of a brand new season of Project 333 and after 3 1/2 years, I think it would be hard to go back to an overstuffed closet.

Start a blog. When I started blogging, I had no idea what I was doing. I had very few technical skills, and didn’t know the difference between a tweet and a widget. I thought it would be hard to write things that people would like. I thought it would be hard to get noticed and grow. Luckily there were resources to help. Blogging has become such an important part of my life and work. I’m so glad I started even though it was hard.

Speak in front of people. I started speaking in front of people who wanted to live better with MS in 2007. I was so nervous during my first presentation, that I brought note cards with me and could see my hands shaking as I held them. By the end of it, all I wanted was to do it again. Now I speak to groups about simplicity, microbusiness, and healthy living, and I don’t need note cards anymore. Sometimes I get a little flutter of nervousness, but my hands don’t shake. The only thing that is the same, is at the end of every presentation, I want to do it again.

Travel alone. I spent the last leg of my trip last month in Paris alone. I didn’t have wifi outside of my apartment, and had no idea where I was going or what I was doing. I was excited about the trip, but I also thought it might be hard and it was sometimes. I got lost and delayed, and sometimes felt a little unsure about myself. In between the very few hard parts though, were the amazing experiences pictured above. I had time to start to my day slowly and drink espresso while writing in the most beautiful parks and cafes. I saw amazing works of art in the Louvre and the L’Orangerie and enjoyed watching artists create new works of art by the river. Being alone gave me time to appreciate the simple things in one of the grandest cities of all.

What I’m learning is that our propensity for positive change is largely proportionate to the length of time we need to go from thinking something is hard, to finding the ease.

That doesn’t mean there aren’t bumps in the road, but the sooner we go from “This is impossible.” to “I got this.” the more open we will be to trying new things, even the scary things.

Answered by shahvaibhavi497
3

Answer:

Make it easier there are ways to make it easier.

Explanation:

give 5 thanks anyone

brainliest kardo

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