The universe is full of magical things patiently waiting for our wits to grow sharper.
den Philpotts
Amplify’d from www.acceleratingfuture.com
"The universe is full of magical things, patiently
waiting for our wits to grow sharper." -
Eden Philpotts
1. Lack of motivation. A talent is irrelevant if a person
is not motivated to use it. Motivation may be external (for example,
social approval) or internal (satisfaction from a job well-done,
for instance). External sources tend to be transient, while internal
sources tend to produce more consistent performance.
2. Lack of impulse control. Habitual impulsiveness gets in
the way of optimal performance. Some people do not bring their full
intellectual resources to bear on a problem but go with the first
solution that pops into their heads.
3. Lack of perserverance and perseveration. Some people give
up too easily, while others are unable to stop even when the quest
will clearly be fruitless.
4. Using the wrong abilities. People may not be using the
right abilities for the tasks in which they are engaged.
5. Inability to translate thought into action. Some people
seem buried in thought. They have good ideas but rarely seem able
to do anything about them.
6. Lack of product orientation. Some people seem more concerned
about the process than the result of activity.
7. Inability to complete tasks. For some people nothing ever
draws to a close. Perhaps it’s fear of what they would do next
or fear of becoming hopelessly enmeshed in detail.
8. Failure to initiate. Still others are unwilling or unable
to initiate a project. It may be indecision or fear of commitment.
9. Fear of failure. People may not reach peak performance
because they avoid the really important challenges in life.
10. Procrastination. Some people are unable to act without
pressure. They may also look for little things to do in order to
put off the big ones.
11. Misattribution of blame. Some people always blame themselves
for even the slightest mishap. Some always blame others.
12. Excessive self-pity. Some people spend more time feeling
sorry for themselves than expending the effort necessary to overcome
the problem.
13. Excessive dependency. Some people expect others to do
for them what they ought to be doing themselves.
14. Wallowing in personal difficulties. Some people let their
personal difficulties interfere grossly with their work. During
the course of life, one can expect some real joys and some real
sorrows. Maintaining a proper perspective is often difficult.
15. Distractibility and lack of concentration. Even some
very intelligent people have very short attention spans.
16. Spreading oneself too think or too thick. Undertaking
too many activities may result in none being completed on time.
Undertaking too few can also result in missed opportunities and
reduced levels of accomplishment.
17. Inability to delay gratification. Some people reward
themselves and are rewarded by others for finishing small tasks,
while avoiding bigger tasks that would earn them larger rewards.
18. Inability to see the forest for the trees. Some people
become obsessed with details and are either unwilling or unable
to see or deal with the larger picture in the projects they undertake.
19. Lack of balance between critical, analytical thinking and
creative, synthetic thinking. It is important for people to
learn what kind of thinking is expected of them in each situation.
20. Too little or too much self-confidence. Lack of self-confidence
can gnaw away at a person’s ability to get things done and
become a self-fulfilling prophecy. Conversely, individuals with
too much self-confidence may not know when to admit they are wrong
or in need of self-improvement.Read more at www.acceleratingfuture.com
See this Amp at http://amplify.com/u/8i4v
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