Truly outstanding individuals never rush. They understand that success is not an overnight affair; it requires gradual progress and patient cultivation. Therefore, being down-to-earth, making steady progress, and ultimately becoming victorious is the mark of wisdom. Progressing slowly is a demonstration of wisdom. Those who don't rush are closer to success.
The more you seek immediate success,
the more prone you are to anxiety.
Have you ever
experienced this? You've been learning a new skill for a month without visible
progress, causing you to doubt your adaptability. Or maybe you've been trying
hard to lose weight for a week with no visible change in your weight, leading
to a loss of motivation to continue. Or at the beginning of reading a book, you
found it hard to comprehend, so you abandoned it. We always desire to see
results quickly, but often give up midway, interrupting our path towards our
goals. This results in anxiety and inner conflict, feeling time is unfair and
becoming restless. Many times, impatience is unproductive.
For instance,
I have a friend who graduated in design. Just three months into his first job,
his designed products didn't receive approval from his boss, so he immediately
resigned and switched companies. In his second job, after working for half a
year, he felt a lack of achievement and earning potential in the design field,
so he transitioned to sales. But a few months later, seeing his colleagues
excelling in sales, he believed he wasn’t suited for sales. Now, he's shifted
to administrative work and started feeling anxious about whether he's fit...
In fact, his
professional abilities are strong; the problem isn't his competence but rather
his impatient eagerness to achieve success and recognition. His colleagues who
joined the company around the same time, with similar skills, have already made
achievements. "The Analects" stated, "Haste makes waste;
focusing only on small immediate benefits might lead to failure in significant
matters." Impatience does not ensure smooth success; it might lead to
issues.
Instead of
hastily seeking outcomes and frequently giving up, it's better to adjust your
pace and maintain patience and persistence. "Things and people in the
world have their own time to develop. We need to keep improving ourselves and
quietly wait for the opportunity to come." It takes ten years to grow
trees but a hundred years to cultivate a person. Stability and patience, not
impatience, are the keys to achieving something and becoming an outstanding
individual.
Walking far is better than Walking
Fast
Walking fast
does not necessarily mean victory; real winners are those who can go far. I
know a friend who never ranked within the top 20 of the class from elementary
school to college, making him a typical late starter. He took the college
entrance examination three times and, he says, luckily got into a good
University.
Even in
university, he never managed to rank among the top 40 students in his class. Even
at graduation, he was still among the lowest performers. However, he persevered
and never gave up.
During the
graduation ceremony, he said, "Although my grades lag behind my
classmates, rest assured, I won't give up, and I'll continue to strive."
At the age of 31, he established his own company, and several of his former
classmates, who had better grades than him, became his employees.
I really like
a saying: "Life’s pursuit doesn’t begin with the starting point, but with
the final reaching point." Life is a long-distance race, and most people,
due to impatience, can't persist, even though they might have initially led.
Yet those who persist, never give up, and embrace a long-term view, with the
accumulation of time, eventually find success.
We’ve all heard
the story of "The Tortoise and the Hare," with the turtle emerging
victorious. Similarly, in life, the ultimate winners are often not those who
start the fastest but those who can persist till the end.
"Life is
like a marathon; the winner isn't the one who starts the fastest." Life is
lengthy, and initial advantages need not boast, similarly, initial failures
need not cause too much anxiety. Present success or failure does not represent
the final outcome. It's by persisting, never giving up, that genuine success is
harvested. Often, not rushing and walking slowly actually leads to a quicker
achievement of the goal.
Seeking quick
success does not lead to success; it's the steady and sure steps that lead to
long distances. Slow progress will take you farther.
Truly Outstanding Individuals
Understand Perseverance
Amazon's CEO
once asked Warren Buffett, "Your investment philosophy is very simple, why
others don’t imitate your approach?" Buffett replied, "Because most
people are not willing to slowly accumulate wealth." Many are eager to
achieve and hope to become millionaires overnight, yet the more they rush to
get rich, the less successful they often become.
"What
you accomplish in 5 years, I will do in 10; what you do in 10, I will do in 20.
And if that's not enough, I will maintain my health and happiness until I'm 80,
then come back to do it after seeing each of you off." Successful
individuals understand the patience of continuous cultivation, steadily
building strength and constantly reinforcing themselves.
Hence, there
is no such thing as an "instantly successful" life; it is simply the
result of long-term accumulation. They invest more time, work harder than
others do.
No one can
easily achieve success. Behind every brilliant achievement lies years of perseverance
and tireless efforts. Only through a decade of careful honing can one create a
sword that echoes throughout the realm. Those who truly put in the hard work
and maintain continuous effort are the victors in life.
"If you
want instant returns, do odd jobs;
If you expect
income every month, be a wage earner;
Having
patience for annual returns is for professional managers;
Waiting
patiently for three to five years is for investors;
Only by evaluating
life from a lifetime perspective makes one a winner in life."
In any era,
the ultimate victors are those who can endure loneliness and weather the lows.
May you find
your path in the coming years, proceed calmly, stay grounded, and take one step
at a time, ultimately reaping bountiful rewards.
Read Also:
Wealth beyond Riches: Self-Enrichment for a Rewarding Life
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