I am in Nepal after 1 long year of absence and will be here for 3 months. I wanted to do something meaningful within these 3 months and so I decided to volunteer as a teacher in an NGO in my community.
I am currently teaching two kids who are very weak in their studies. These are kids from disadvantaged families and come from remote parts of Nepal where you will often find poor facilities as well as lackadaisical human resources.
While teaching I always encourage the kids to try and not worry about being wrong. I wonder how far is this notion tolerated in the current education system. It certainly doesn't only apply to the education system but also to our society. Do we punish others and also ourselves for any mistakes/failures?
When was the last time you made a mistake or failed? How did you deal with this?
The last time I failed was for an interview for a very coveted job position. It was something that I was desperately looking forward for. Unfortunately, I didn't clear the first stage. I was definitely sad for the first few hours after receiving the email about my failure. I thought I had delivered and presented myself very well in the interview and yet I didn't make the cut so I constantly asked myself questions about any improvements that I could make to increase my chance of success in my next interview. I used my this experience as a learning for my upcoming interview and was able to get an offer. It was exactly what I was looking for.
"Fall Seven Times, Stand Up Eight."
"Fall Seven Times, Stand Up Eight."
So I will ask you again. When was the last time you failed?
Gratitude 17: I am grateful for the education that I have received.
P/s : Here is the link to the NGO that I am currently volunteering at
https://www.facebook.com/Manang-pre-school-free-for-disadvantage-children-1914771522128095/?hc_ref=ARRZQip0hoPF4gXgFw4ftdXmNXbkgeinkBcvldl0kVv3PfSWdlAWSJPZwQWYg-6g62Q&fref=nf
Cheers for another successful post!
Regards,
Karma
Karma
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