Two directions:
1. Gold will always shine (hard work, regardless of the ridicule and ridicule of the outside world, and finally become a talent)
2. Encouragement is achievement The greatest motivation (malicious encouragement can drag people down, but well-intentioned encouragement can build people up)
Encouragement is an indispensable part of everyone's life. If a person has never been encouraged, then he will drive The boat will no longer stand upright after a gust of wind blows. Learning is like sailing against the current. If you don't advance, you will retreat. If a person loses his reputation, but later when he achieves better results, the sound of sighing still rings in his ears, he may be more difficult and hesitant than before, and the river rumbles and pushes his boat back step by step, but When he forgot all about sleep and food to make the boat advance a hard-won distance, but it was considered to be only a trivial achievement, the steering wheel in his hand was turning in the opposite direction faster and faster. And what is his motivation to move forward? It has long been thrown out of the sky.
Like the American writer Bard? "The Great and the Terrible" by Schulberg. In the article, Buddy wrote a poem. His mother admired it, but his father disagreed. Although Buddy was faced with a stern face every time he gave his work to his father for reading, his mother still encouraged him as always, so Buddy continued to write, and finally his hard work paid off. After several years, Perseverance finally made Buddy a writer. Although Buddy did not receive high praise from his father, a few kind words from his mother were enough for Buddy to hold up his own boat. Buddy borrowed his mother's words to push his boat to continue sailing, and because of this, he made great progress. Every encouragement from his mother is the prerequisite for Buddy to finally reach glory.
This is not only the view of American writers, but also the well-known Churchill. Churchill was born with incomplete regrets and became the target of cynicism from classmates and an outlet for teachers. Because things continued like this, Churchill became discouraged and lazy all day long. His grades remained last and he lost the power to move forward. But his fourth-grade teacher became a turning point in his life. Not only did the teacher not find fault with him, but he often told Churchill about the advantages he had. When Churchill made trivial progress, the teacher wrote a book about it, so Churchill overcame his psychological barriers, ranked among the best, and eventually became the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, and the story of his fourth-grade teacher has been immortalized ever since.
My life is also full of encouragement. I remember before a sports meeting, the teacher trained us to practice the 100-meter run. At the beginning, my speed really gave the teacher a headache. It was 19 seconds. It was just a dream to participate in the competition and get a spot on the gold medal list at this speed. But the teacher said, it doesn't matter. In fact, everyone is just like this when they first participate in the competition. As long as they practice hard, ranking at the top will be a piece of cake. I suddenly felt a warm wave rushing over me. After a period of hard training, the preliminaries finally came. My results were incredible. I was able to win the championship in 17 seconds. I was ecstatic.
Success is not so mysterious, as long as you have a special kind of motivation, which comes from extraordinary encouragement time and time again.