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PROBLEMS REVEAL GENIUS

Problems are servants, says Robin Sharma. Problems help you grow in life and progress. They better you and enable you to understand yourself more as a person. Everyone comes cross problems and challenges in their life. There is not one person who is worry free and without any issues in their life. Great and successful leaders have developed a habit of looking at problems as opportunities as advancement. They see the obstacles as building blocks in life that will ameliorate and hone them. Instead of seeing problems as something burdening that stresses you out, see it as challenge and possibilities. This establishes the proposition that is not really a matter of believing whether problems exist or not, but it is a matter about how you see issues in life. In order to overcome the daily challenges we see in this world, we must rise to a level where we will rise above our world and take off the limit in our thinking.

You will come across obstacles in life — fair and unfair. And you will discover, time and time again, that what matters most is not what these obstacles are but how we see them, how we react to them, and whether we keep our composure. You will learn that this reaction determines how successful we will be in overcoming — or possibly thriving because of — them. Resilient people acknowledge difficult situations, keep calm and evaluate things rationally so they can make a plan and act. Perseverance is a trait deeply embedded in such people. Every obstacle you face is the way to advance your next action. What stands in the way becomes the way. Action is the solution and the cure to our predicaments.

The aim in life is not to avoid struggles, but to have the right ones; not to avoid worry, but to care about the right things; not to live without fear, but to confront worthy fears with force and passion. Don’t expect a time in your life when you’ll be free from change, free from struggle, free from worry. Learn to persist in the face of struggle for the greater good; for the cultivation of your best self.

As Nelson Mandela once said, "Do not judge me by my success, judge me by how many times I fell down and got back up again."