The other thing exceptional people seem to have is a special talent for converting lifeās setbacks into future successes. Creativity researchers concur. In a poll of 143 creativity researchers, there was wide agreement about the number one ingredient in creative achievement. And it was exactly the kind of perseverance and resilience produced by the growth mindset.
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Howard Gardner, in his book Extraordinary Minds, concluded that exceptional individuals have āa special talent for identifying their own strengths and weaknesses.ā Itās interesting that those with the growth mindset seem to have that talent.
Itās also important to realize that even if people have a fixed mindset, theyāre not always in that mindset. In fact, in many of our studies, we put people into a growth mindset. We tell them that an ability can be learned and that the task will give them a chance to do that. Or we have them read a scientific article that teaches them the growth mindset. The article describes people who did not have natural ability, but who developed exceptional skills. These experiences make our research participants into growth-minded thinkers, at least for the moment - and they act like growth-minded thinkers, too.
A remarkable thing Iāve learned from my research is that in the growth mindset, you donāt always need confidence.
What I mean is that even when you think youāre not good at something, you can still plunge into it wholeheartedly and stick to it. Actually, sometimes you plunge into something because youāre not good at it. This is a wonderful feature of the growth mindset. You donāt have to think youāre already great at something to want to do it and to enjoy doing it.
Each individual has a meant-to-be, a particular blending of talents and capacities that can guide him to achievement. Everyone you recognise as creative - not only our speakers but also such luminaries as Einstein, Picasso, Beethoven - has in common the amazing ability to express his own unique purpose here on earth. They have found that true creativity is being themselves. When Leonardo DaVinci was asked to name his greatest accomplishment, he answered, āLeonardo DaVinci.
Iāve known some geniuses who were such a pain to work with that we had to let them go; then again, some of our most brilliant, delightful, and effective people were let go by previous employers for being none of those things. It would be nice if there were some magic bullet that turned difficult people into success stories, but there isnāt. There are just too many unknowns and immeasurable personal characteristics involved for us to pretend that we have figured out how to do that. Everyone says they want to hire excellent people, but in truth we donāt really know, at first, who will rise up to make a difference. I believe in putting in place a framework for finding potential, then nurturing talent and excellence, believing that many will rise, while knowing that not all will.