Grit
Our kids have lost their grit. If our youth are now considered those less than 26 years old, this is a whole generation and this is frightening.
So what is grit? It is an American word meaning “Firmness of character and indominable spirit”. It is the British ‘stiff upper lip’ or the Latin ‘fortitude’. It is the new educational buzz word after a generation of emphasis on building self-esteem.
What does grit consist of?
1. Conscientiousness is THE big correlation to grit. It is a measure of meticulous, careful and painstaking effort. It is self-control of emotions and behavior in the face of temptations and impulses. It is learning from your mistakes or the mistakes of others and soldering on. It is achievement oriented and one is thought of as dependable.
2. Courage is bravery when facing failure. It is a blend of genetics (hardwired personality or brain chemistry) and life experiences. If one has not failed then there is no sense that this can be overcome and no determination to persevere. Perseveration is a passion for a goal, or personal attainment of a goal, which is ambition. Achievement is completing manageable goals which is immediate feedback but grit is the desire for long-term goals and is therefore difficult to achieve, regardless of feedback.
3. Endurance is hardiness; the determination to persist thru difficult circumstances. To be a champion, one must first be a contender. To be a contender takes 10,000 hours of practice (20 hours weekly for 10 years) with a purpose (long term goal) plus luck. But one can make their own luck by developing knowledge or skills that are needed at that moment at that time.
4. Resilience is maintaining a core purpose and integrity while overcoming adversity. It is picking your self up, dusting your self off and getting back on the horse. If it can be directed, it is the portion of self-image or self-worth that you have been there before and this can be overcome. Perfection is an illusion but excellence is more forgiving and allows for disappointment.
The character of our kids has changed in the last 2 generations. We have been giving them lots of self-esteem but they are growing soft, they are coddled, they are fragile and they remain dependents. Kids are being protected from failure and pain. Now psychologic anxiety has replaced depression. They are now manifesting anxiety, mental blocks and a need for instant perfection at their first attempt. Their attention span is under 15 seconds provided there is lots of sensory stimulation. Is this what we want?
So what makes a successful person? They possess traits above– they have zeal and persistence of motive and effort. It is stable and doesn’t require immediate positive feedback. It is the maintenance of motivation despite experiences with failure and adversity.
Grit may not be sufficient for success, but it is very necessary. Grit is unrelated or inversely related to talent. Grit is slightly inversely proportional to intelligence. If success leads to happiness, then those with grit will more likely be happy. That is a fulfilling life worth living.
We can cultivate grit in our children:
1. Praise effort over outcome but not lavishly, and encourage kids to push through pain and failure and so develop self-respect
2. Associate with those with positive grit
3. When things get hard and they want to quit, get them to change direction and redirect the goal
4. When the challenge is tough, consider the idiots who have succeeded. Why not me?
5. Let the kids fail
6. Do not over program them, give them some unstructured time and boredom. Hopefully this will lead to independent thinking, imagination and innovation
7. Put down the cellphone and develop social skills
8. I am a parent not your friend. Solve your own problems
Our system has innumerable possibilities of success. You are the difference between mediocre and excellence.
Veni, Vidi Velcro
( I came, I saw, I stuck with it
)
ReCent Posts






