Subject
- #Effort
- #Shame
- #Goal Kick
- #Self-Development
- #Improvement
Created: 2025-01-23
Created: 2025-01-23 08:54
I've enjoyed playing soccer for over 20 years. I seriously started learning soccer in the sixth grade of elementary school as a goalkeeper. I'm still a goalkeeper.
However, I have a problem with goal kicks. No matter how hard I kick, the ball doesn't go far. It's a chronic problem. I should have practiced more when I was younger, but I invested in saving techniques, so I'm still struggling with it even now.
I can no longer tolerate this. I've started practicing goal kicks. I've decided to work on improving my weaknesses.
It's not shameful to be bad at something. It's difficult to be good at everything. What's important is to acknowledge your weaknesses and work on improving them.
However, some people are ashamed of their weaknesses. They are ashamed, but they don't think about improving. They just let time pass without effort. Secretly, they may even imagine that things will get better on their own as time goes by. That's what I've been doing until now.
If I don't do it, someone else can. I've spent my time thinking, "It's urgent to put out the immediate fire," even though it's frustrating.
It's not shameful to be bad at something; it's shameful to know you're bad at something and not try to improve it. And it's a problem when you try to improve something you're bad at, but you don't improve it even though it is possible to improve it. That's laziness.
In my second year of serious sales activities, and having rediscovered soccer, I will focus on identifying and improving areas where I am lacking and not performing well.
Comments0