Therefore, it is also important to have a rational expectation.
When you have the expectation of fierce competition and the goal of getting a good grade, will you still have time to lament the examination paper?
You must try to improve your score as much as possible. If you find that you really can't improve after the test and can't complete the previous goal, then the rational choice for you is to change the goal or even change the trajectory immediately, instead of continuing to complete a task that is doomed to be impossible according to the original goal.
These things are all the same in college.
As I mentioned in the following answer, you must first find your general direction, establish your first goal, and then put this goal first.
What would you do if you went back to your freshman year?
The second is to find out the competition rules, and then seek your own optimal strategy under the competition rules.
If you walk for a period of time and find that you can't achieve your set goals in this race, you should change your goals as soon as possible, or even change the track.
Instead of stopping there and complaining that others are too curly.
Many people fail because they have the mentality of failure, and feel that once they fail in a game, their life will be over.
In this way, you will be timid, dare not do anything, hesitate to ask others to guarantee you and let others insure their choices.
To put it bluntly, it is because competition is regarded as a limited game and there is no long-term perspective. Wherever we go, we will only look for the local optimal solution, without considering what the global optimal solution is.
If the failure of a small game can determine the fate of your life, it is also because you have chosen to give up on yourself.
People who are very concerned about the success or failure of a single competition and seek local optimal solutions everywhere are doomed to face the bitter cry of doubting life in the middle of the night in the future.