In other words, all the difficulties in the world developed from the easy times, and all the major events in the world were formed step by step from small places.
It sounds like nonsense, but when you think about it, many truths sound like nonsense, but those who have been thinking hard for ten years and verified with practical actions are the big winners in life.
For example, Mr. Gao (founder of the same school, chairman of Changjiang Industry, MBA of Peking University, alumnus), whom I especially admire, is the representative of extreme practice. Many students who have listened to his courses say that in the eyes of such a powerful person as Mr. Gao, there seems to be no major and difficult things, only small and easy things. "
Because the students shared this sentence, I have the following two experiences about this sentence.
0 1
"The world is difficult, and it will be easy."
In the book Micro Habits, the author mentioned the origin of micro habits, that is, he has a 30-minute exercise plan every day, which has always failed for many years. Later, he was inspired and began to ask himself to do only one push-up every day, which made his exercise plan successful. Because of the habit of "one push-up", it is too small to fail.
Is this another interpretation of "everything is difficult and easy"?
If we can also break down the difficult things and plans that we want to accomplish in our daily life into easy habits that are too small to fail, can we also accomplish this difficult thing?
02
"Great things in the world must be done in the details."
I think big things can be compared to a big goal, and small things can be compared to sub-goals and grandson goals after the big goal is dismantled.
If you understand it this way, you can think that the ancients also had the ability to decompose goals, but they just called them different.
Try to think about it. If we regard every major event in life as a goal, it will be much easier to break it down into several small goals and then into things that can be done every day.
For example, I have a great event, that is, to become a promoter of Chinese medicine culture. This event is quite big for me. For me who graduated from a non-Chinese medicine college, I always feel far away from her. Thinking of such a big thing, I may be too big to finish it. I'm afraid of difficulties and don't know how to start. But I take her as a goal and break it down into many small things and small goals.
For example, first of all, we should understand what ability it takes to be a promoter of Chinese medicine culture. At least I have to understand Chinese medicine and Chinese medicine culture before I can promote it! Then the first small goal is to learn Chinese medicine, and then the small goal of learning Chinese medicine is broken down into smaller sub-goals or smaller things, such as learning the basic theory of Chinese medicine this year, and then the annual goal is broken down into 12 months, 1 month, learning Yin and Yang in February, and so on, and then the monthly goal is broken down into what to learn every week and what to learn every day.
Turn a big thing into a small thing that you can start doing every day, and then finish it seriously and slowly. Over time, did it eventually pile up into a big event?
If there is a successful method, I think the ability to disassemble major events or goals should also be counted as one!
Finally, "the world is difficult and easy, and the world is important and detailed." This sentence has been mentioned back and forth by others, and I really haven't tried it. This time, I heard a casual sentence from my classmates, which made me enlightened and had a more grounded understanding of this sentence.
If you put your heart into it, you can meet your own teacher anywhere in your life!
End—
Jenny maling
Pay attention to parenting and self-cultivation
There are two daughters at home/promoters of Chinese medicine culture/firmly believe that parents are the best doctors for their children.