@bts_noonas: He so confident too #jungkook #정국

Jung Kook high fived me 🥹⁷
Jung Kook high fived me 🥹⁷
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Wednesday 04 March 2026 04:07:29 GMT
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ddubsfavegirl13
Jennifer⁷💜🖤 :
I legit cracked in front of my coworkers when I saw him wink I squealed buried my face and growled a bit 😩🙌🏽💜
2026-03-04 08:42:06
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We worship talent. We idolize genius. We romanticize the idea that greatness just happens to the blessed. The possibility that someone could achieve mastery through 10,000 hours of practice seems too banal and too accessible. So we ignore it. We pretend the greats were born different. Born better. Born with something we don't have. This lie protects us from the truth: almost anyone can reach those heights through relentless effort. Almost anyone can become what they currently worship. That should be inspiring. Instead, it's threatening. Because if mastery is accessible, you have no excuse. Practice is the great equalizer. The thing that turns ordinary into mastery. Not genetics. Not luck. Not divine gifts. Practice. Repetition. The same movement done ten thousand times until your brain rewires itself to make the impossible, possible. Millions of years of evolution built this capacity into you. The ability to transform through deliberate repetition. Again and again and again. To elevate your powers through practice. Again and again and again. Your brain wants to move in this direction. It craves mastery. It's designed for it. But we've lost this understanding. We've traded the transformative power of practice for the comfortable delusion of talent. We've chosen to believe in gifts over grind because gifts require nothing from us but to accept them from God. This is stupid. A world that rejects practice is a world that rejects mastery. A world where no one has the patience to become great at anything complex. Where everyone wants the result without the process. The trophy without the training. The skill without the sacrifice. Resist this. Venerate practice. Worship the 10,000 hours. Celebrate the obsession that transforms the average into ascendancy. Because practice isn't the boring path to greatness. It's the only path. @newmentalities
We worship talent. We idolize genius. We romanticize the idea that greatness just happens to the blessed. The possibility that someone could achieve mastery through 10,000 hours of practice seems too banal and too accessible. So we ignore it. We pretend the greats were born different. Born better. Born with something we don't have. This lie protects us from the truth: almost anyone can reach those heights through relentless effort. Almost anyone can become what they currently worship. That should be inspiring. Instead, it's threatening. Because if mastery is accessible, you have no excuse. Practice is the great equalizer. The thing that turns ordinary into mastery. Not genetics. Not luck. Not divine gifts. Practice. Repetition. The same movement done ten thousand times until your brain rewires itself to make the impossible, possible. Millions of years of evolution built this capacity into you. The ability to transform through deliberate repetition. Again and again and again. To elevate your powers through practice. Again and again and again. Your brain wants to move in this direction. It craves mastery. It's designed for it. But we've lost this understanding. We've traded the transformative power of practice for the comfortable delusion of talent. We've chosen to believe in gifts over grind because gifts require nothing from us but to accept them from God. This is stupid. A world that rejects practice is a world that rejects mastery. A world where no one has the patience to become great at anything complex. Where everyone wants the result without the process. The trophy without the training. The skill without the sacrifice. Resist this. Venerate practice. Worship the 10,000 hours. Celebrate the obsession that transforms the average into ascendancy. Because practice isn't the boring path to greatness. It's the only path. @newmentalities

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