Heroes are not born they are made explanation
Answers
Answer:
Expertise
Explanation:
Put another way: Heroes aren't born, they're made. ... Expertise and training in helping others often spur people to act — rather than run or freeze — in a crisis.
The short answer is neither. People who are molded into heroic roles can cower and people who faint at the sight of blood can lose their lives saving others. The other short answer is both. Some people are born with an innate sense that makes them run toward trouble. Some people learn through training to run at trouble.
Heroism does not patently conform to my definition but this is how I perceive it and it’s true for the most part.
My definition: Heroism is engaging in an act that brings benefit to another or others more than to yourself with a reasonable expectation that you will suffer mightily for doing it.
It doesn’t have to be fatal, it doesn’t even have to be a risk of injury per se. If you elect to help someone financially, at certain risk to your own future but with the result of improvement in other’s lives, that meets my definition of heroic.
Inversely, if you opt a career in the military or law enforcement or professional firefighting you aren’t a hero by dint of occupation. You are a person who is trained to perform potentially dangerous functions in the course of your work. That is true of plumbers, electricians, high school teachers, truck drivers, meat cutters and the list goes on. They aren’t heroes for doing their jobs either. In the course of the work of soldiers, cops, prison guards etc there is a significantly higher likelihood of being in a position where risk to you will make the difference in the lives of others. The response chosen at that time determines heroism. That choice is definitely more likely to present itself to first responders and pilots but it’s not the sole domain of those careers. Teachers, cab drivers, equipment operators can and do act heroically.