LizzieMaine
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Reading your previous post a little more, Lizzie: A healthy dose of optimism and a reality check is what people today need more than ever.
How to get/give it to them is the ultimate question though.
Well, I think for starters, it's a good idea to teach kids to understand that when they fail at something the world isn't going to come to an end -- and that it isn't something that can be corrected by blaming the other kid, the teacher, the coach, the school board or The Man. They should understand that a big part of life is simply random factors beyond anyone's control -- and that sometimes, no matter how hard we try, and how much we want something, sometimes we just aren't going to get it. Them's the breaks, kid.
I'm not saying a kid shouldn't be taught to have aspirations -- but they should be *realistic* aspirations. I had a cousin who dreamed all his life of playing in the NBA. He had coaches and friends who encouraged this, and he spent his entire scholastic career focusing on basketball. But you know, the odds against playing in the NBA are pretty slim for someone who's five-foot-five with rickety knees, and nothing he could ever do, no matter how hard he tried and no matter how optimistic he was, would ever change that. Needless to say, his dream did not come true.
Goals are fine, and goals are important. As long as they're *realistic* goals.
Or, as a wise tiger once said...
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