In 1980s, Japanese long-distance runner Yamada Ichi won two consecutive international marathon invitational championships. At that time, the reporter thought that his experience of "winning by wisdom" was to avoid the important and avoid the light. 10 years later, his autobiography came out, and the world finally understood his "wisdom" of winning: at first, he set his goal on the flag of the finish line and ran for several kilometers, thinking that there were dozens of kilometers left. He felt tired and lacked confidence. Later, before each competition, he always looked at the route and drew eye-catching signs on the road-big trees, apartments and so on. His goal is no longer the "one" flag at the end, but the "several" eye-catching signs drawn. In the competition, he tried to rush to the first goal. Then I rushed to the second goal and the third goal ... so I ran more than 40 kilometers. It is difficult to run 40 kilometers first, but for a well-trained long-distance runner, it may be a trivial matter to run one or two kilometers or even several kilometers first (the distance between two goals). Three Honda shortened the length, made the big one smaller, and then easily overcame the seemingly powerful difficulties.
Similarly, we are dealing with difficulties every day, and we will encounter difficulties at every step of our lives. As long as we turn difficulties into "separable and solvable" and summon up courage to overcome them, we will gradually approach success. This will also inspire students who are studying in senior three!
In the face of difficulties, we don't turn a blind eye, underestimate or magnify. Studying in senior three is like sailing against the current. Every senior three student will face some difficulties in the general review. The key is how to overcome, how to set goals for yourself and break them down: annual goals, medium-term goals, and short-term goals every month. This is actually the concretization of learning target management in senior three. At the same time, decomposing goals can also reduce stress.
Learn to break down difficulties, no matter how big the problem is, it will be a piece of cake for you.