Jordan Peterson says people who succeed in almost everything they do tell themselves the truth about these 7 personal weaknesses - Silicon Canals
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Jordan Peterson says people who succeed in almost everything they do tell themselves the truth about these 7 personal weaknesses - Silicon Canals
"Ever wonder why some people seem to crush it in every area of life while others stay stuck in the same patterns year after year? According to Jordan Peterson, clinical psychologist and author of "12 Rules for Life," the difference comes down to one brutal practice: Telling yourself the truth about your weaknesses. Not the comfortable half-truths we usually feed ourselves. The real, uncomfortable, sometimes painful truth."
""You cannot be protected from the things that frighten you and hurt you, but if you identify with the part of your being that is responsible for transformation, then you are always the equal, or more than the equal of even the things that frighten you," Peterson says in his lectures. This hits hard because it's so easy to blame external circumstances. The economy. Your boss. Your childhood. Whatever."
Brutal, uncompromising self-honesty dissolves stagnant behaviors and enables progress. Truth removes 'dead wood' by exposing weaknesses and responsibilities that excuses conceal. Practical change begins when individuals admit avoidance of responsibility, stop blaming external factors, and assess their role in setbacks. Personal experience of a failed startup illustrates how story-driven self-deception delayed recovery until therapy revealed overlooked weaknesses. People who consistently succeed confront core personal shortcomings without flinching and act to correct them. They intercept excuses, ask what they could have done differently, and take concrete responsibility for transformation rather than remaining passive victims of circumstance.
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