Describe your present mindset about life within 5 sentence?
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Wabisabi Learning
MINDFULNESS & WELLBEING
The Growth Mindset Choice: 10 Fixed Mindset Examples We Can Change
Don't let fixed mindset define who you are.
You may have heard the idea that what we think or how we feel is a choice. No one gets inside our hearts or heads and does damage unless we permit them, goes the story. Don't compare yourself to others, people proclaim. You were born with unlimited potential, and you need to adopt a better attitude about effort and success, so you've read.
These are some of the slogans of the growth mindset. And cliché or not, every one of them is correct. However, fixed vs growth mindset examples like the ones we'll be discussing here take more than just simple belief. They require effort, focus, and determination to turn around.
You have to know that more than one outcome is possible, even one that you didn't expect. Above all, these beliefs require you to realize that transforming them takes time, time, and then more time.
That's okay—we believe you're more than up to the challenge.
10 Common Fixed Mindset Examples to Get Fixed
Either I'm Good at Something, or I'm Not
This statement is limited thinking at its most basic level, so it's a great place to start. How can we possibly know we're bad at something if we don't try it? Additionally, how do we know we can't improve unless we attempt to do so? The thing about this statement—like most fixed mindset affirmations—is that it's based in fear. You'll find that's a common thread with all of these. Specifically, this one is about letting go of the fear of appearing bad at something.
Growth mindset alternative: If I'm not good at something, I can always become better at it through practice.
I Can't Learn Now; It's Too Late
It is never, repeat, never too late to become a learner. This is a notion back of not only the growth mindset but also the lifelong learning mindset. As an old saying goes, the day we stop learning is the day we stop living. By and large, this is how learning happens in the digital age. Thanks to the open Internet and the world of online ed, we can learn something "just in time" as opposed to "just in case."
Growth mindset alternative: I can learn whatever I want or need to, exactly when I need to learn it.
There's No Point in Trying if I'm Going to Fail
True, you might fail. You might fail multiple times. You might fail so spectacularly that it paralyzes you and leaves you wondering what to do next. So here again, we are dealing with the face of fear, rearing its ugly head and laughing at our efforts with utter disdain. But every failure we face is an opportunity to look at the situation in a whole new light. So the question, in this case, is one that will determine every single move you make from then on: How bad do you want it?
Growth mindset alternative: I see failures as opportunities to learn, to reassess, and to do better next time.
I Take Feedback as a Personal Attack
Here's the rub—depending on the person, it sometimes can be. Some people don't know how to criticize constructively (or don't care to) or are so profoundly resentful of themselves that they take it out on the others by denouncing all their efforts.
Explanation:
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