Page 101 - 100 Ways to Motivate Yourself
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can  be,  there  is  nothing  better  than  competition.  It  teaches  you  the  valuable

               lesson that no matter how good you are, there is always somebody better than
               you are. That’s the lesson in humility you need, the lesson those teachers are
               misguidedly trying to teach by eliminating grades. It teaches you that by trying
               to  beat  somebody  else,  you  reach  for  more  inside  of  yourself.  Trying  to  beat
               somebody else simply puts the “game” back into life. If it’s done optimistically,
               it gives energy to both competitors. It teaches sportsmanship. And it gives you a
               benchmark for measuring your own growth.

                    The poet William Butler Yeats used to be amused at how many definitions
               people  came  up  with  for  happiness.  But  happiness  wasn’t  any  of  the  things
               people said it was, insisted Yeats.

                    “Happiness is just one thing,” he said. “Growth. We are happy when we are
               growing.”


                    A  good  competitor  will  cause  you  to  grow.  He  or  she  will  stretch  you
               beyond your former skill level. If you want to get good at chess, play against
               somebody better at chess than you are. In the movie Searching for Bobby Fisher,
               we  see  the  negative  effects  of  resisting  competition  on  a  young  chess  genius
               until he starts to use the competition to grow. Once he stops taking it personally
               and  seriously,  the  game  itself  becomes  energizing.  Once  he  embraces  the
               intriguing fun of competition, he gets better and better as a player, and grows as
               a person.


                    I mentioned earlier that I’d heard a report on the radio that there was a Little
               League organization somewhere in Pennsylvania that had decided not to keep
               score  in  its  games  anymore  because  losing  might  damage  the  players’  self-
               esteem. They had it all wrong: Losing teaches kids to grow in the face of defeat.
               It also teaches them that losing isn’t the same as dying, or being worthless. It’s
               just the other side of winning. If we teach children to fear competition because
               of the possibility of losing, then we actually lower their self-esteem.

                    Compete  wherever  you  can.  But  always  compete  in  the  spirit  of  fun,
               knowing  that  finally  surpassing  someone  else  is  far  less  important  than
               surpassing yourself.





               69. Turn your mother down


                    Psychologist  and  author  M.  Scott  Peck  observes,  “To  a  child,  his  or  her
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