MASTERY: Outperform 99% of people and become the best//Robert Greene (book summary) 👉📕 Buy the book here: amzn.to/419G0PE
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@littlebitbetter77 ай бұрын
🎧To listen to the AUDIO version of this book for FREE check out Audible below. Sign up for a 30-day Free trial to get 1 book for free(any book). You keep the book even if you cancel before the trial ends. 👉amzn.to/3kS1eNH I personally have been using AUDIBLE for over 5 years and it is THE BEST app on my phone. I can listen to books while I am going somewhere, walking in the park, or doing some boring job :) P.S. I personally use and recommend the AUDIBLE PREMIUM PLUS option. It gives you 1 credit every month which you can use to buy any book regardless of how expensive the book is.
@tahirisaid26934 ай бұрын
Reading books has really skyrocket the way I think about investing. Indeed, no one has ever got rich by saving money. If you want to become financially free, You need to Invest. I've come to realize that the key to amassing wealth lies in making sound investments.
@georgestone01234 ай бұрын
Yeah, You're Right! According to a book writer; ‘What everyone needs is to work with a financial advisor, who can help you get in and out of any investment at any time and you'd sure be in profit.
@chriswalter924 ай бұрын
I’m trying to get onto the investing ladder at 40. I wish at 55 I will be testifying to huge success!
@tahirisaid26934 ай бұрын
Whichever firm you select, make sure you get your insurance from a reputable financial adviser, such as *Jenny Pamogas Canaya,* who has dedicated her career to financial planning. Because they will assist you in escalating, navigating better, and completing the task in a safer manner..|
@sanaalazare4 ай бұрын
I was pleasantly surprised to find that you're familiar with her as well. I've had the privilege of working closely with Jenny Pamogas Canaya over the past few months, and she has not only helped me earn substantial profits but has also been an exceptional mentor and trader. Her ability to navigate various market situations is truly remarkable, and I couldn't be more satisfied with our collaboration..
@chriswalter924 ай бұрын
I've come across several positive endorsements of Jenny Pamogas Canaya on various platforms, including KZbin channels, seminars, and more._.
@mannysr677 ай бұрын
Uncle Bill is an inspiration, holding onto his dream despite the need to put food on the table. He never gave up. Uncle bill the hero.
@TNMJADАй бұрын
Definitely! I thought, “what a pragmatic guy good for him!”
@ambition1129 ай бұрын
0:06: 🎨 Uncle Bill, a retired engineer, pursued his passion for painting and now lives the artist's life. 3:03: 🔍 To find your life's task, search your past for signs of an inner voice or force that pushed you towards something you loved doing and would make others happy. 7:01: 📚 The importance of apprenticeship and skill acquisition in finding a larger purpose in life. 11:33: ✨ The apprenticeship phase is crucial for success in creating unique and valuable videos. 12:56: 📚 Tips for achieving mastery: be willing to learn, trust the process, embrace pain and failure, practice discipline, and develop social intelligence. 17:23: 🧠 Developing a dimensional mind is important for creativity and skill. 20:07: ✨ The power of mastery lies in combining skill and creativity to create something new and original. Recap by Tammy AI
@MilindBorkar_MENTOR4 ай бұрын
heartfelt deep gratitude for your book summary in a fantastic way, God bless you and your entire team.
@stepheningosi1139 ай бұрын
I love how quick this has become my favorite YT channel 😊
@gardencali-arkansasstyle69959 ай бұрын
Love the idea to Observe,, first.. then later practice. Thanks for setting this out, step by step.
@gerardvongyw6709 ай бұрын
1. This for the timely video you highlight the point of trusting the process resonate with my situation of wanting to give up
@tonynguyen10197 ай бұрын
Thanks - your videos are awesome - learning so much
@clearresults72818 ай бұрын
Thank you for the engaging and entertaining summary on Mastery. I found your information and animation captivating. As someone who didn't follow a conventional path, it was interesting to see some of the patterns I intuitively followed. I've subscribed and am looking forward to watching more summaries.
@marshallmckinney69469 ай бұрын
Beyond informative, and great animations! Thank you for this content 🙏🏻 May your channel grow bigger each day, and your success continue to rise.
@ronnatalia31309 ай бұрын
from how things are going nowadays exceptional skill or mastery goes hand in hand with integrity, trustworthiness. you're word is you're bond. then I can get invested in that kind of mastery.
@user-xx6hs2qv3s5 ай бұрын
Great post, I m retired, don’t have to work and can do anything I want. Thanks for the info I need !! Life is great !!
@kdub65938 ай бұрын
I became a Master Physician/Anesthesiologist. A large part of becoming a Master was to great a life in which I could leave my field of Mastery. I became a Master, cashed in and ran.
@NikRully-bq6dr9 ай бұрын
Very useful! Thank so much!
@user-pn7mm2rb9f9 ай бұрын
my kids need to watch your video thank you
@MP-vf8qz8 ай бұрын
Another thing is to get through and overcome any trauma or fear in your way.
@nyquil7629 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@HeyImAedRianne7 ай бұрын
This woke me up. It is still a weekday today and I cant wait until weekend comes, for me to do the thing that I really want to do(dancing). I realized why not do it now? I am free anyway! Thanks!❤ Love your videos!
@mcokwanyonyango96849 ай бұрын
Asante sana❤
@channel.INSPIREDINSIGHT9 ай бұрын
Nice video! I found a lot of interesting for myself. You have a very nice channel👍🏻
@gombaobariokpa13528 ай бұрын
Very nice, entertaining and informative video. Well done
@CaseyHolden-kh5nf8 ай бұрын
I've actually read most of these books though out my life I just did it in prison and forgot about it in the real world.
@mjgholdings25106 ай бұрын
Your comment intrigued me so I just subscribed to your channel.
@jackb75747 ай бұрын
to the girl who is talking, when you explained work and life at the 4:40 secs! i was like wow, she is actually speaking the truth. and love it. i love u!! i hope one day i am brave enough to live my dream life.
@armorykittington9 ай бұрын
This channel is incredible!!! You should totally make a tutorial on how you draw like that!! Super cool and seamless... I wanna know how to do it lol. 😁👌
@SkyEther7 ай бұрын
It’s a software called Doodle
@alirezaasadi51129 ай бұрын
I'm a fan of your channel. keep it up, you doing great
@Chandler8909 ай бұрын
I love your channel, very helpful information
@mrxXxkink7 ай бұрын
I love the narrator voice ❤ they are the reason why I subscribed
@CaseyHolden-kh5nf8 ай бұрын
You just gave me the best idea ever.
@aapex18 ай бұрын
Well done. Thank you.
@blessings4life8 ай бұрын
Outshine your master. It’s a challenge and they will be impressed and might even step it up. If they fire you, oh well the room was basic anyways 😂
@kechazileonel81415 ай бұрын
I love your video. It tells me the new way I need to move towards. Thank you
@christopherjohnbutler40339 ай бұрын
Thanks!
@kevingarris1988 ай бұрын
The goal of my life is to unite my avocation with my vocation. As my two eyes make one in sight (Robert Frost)
@damonaho74999 ай бұрын
Great video.
@prinskinoglover6 ай бұрын
10:40 to be honest, I’ve been thinking of creating a channel ever since I found yours. Just minutes before watching this video, I’ve decided on law as my niche and here you are mentioning it 😆
@dalepittaway7258 ай бұрын
Some people are perfect humans in a situation. If your too perfect as an individual. You will fail amongst the imperfect collective. If your too smart and switched on you wouldn’t survive the overwhelming information. If your too stupid you will fail all the time. Life is one big jigsaw and a perfectly rounded piece will never fit in no matter where you placed it.
@jacquelyngutierrez54277 ай бұрын
Excellent video!!!
@natarajrangayana8 ай бұрын
Wow great work Learnt a lot Good luck🎉
@illwillbeats7 ай бұрын
Really good voice over 👌
@rzacorak51389 ай бұрын
Can you tell me how you create and make the videos?
@Johnnystiletto-ri8ht8 ай бұрын
Turning your hobbies into your money can ruin your hobbies...
@ernestgreen2545 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this imperative video
@Gid-J7 ай бұрын
Those social IQ tips are quite immoral. For example, if you can outshine your master and they aren't humble enough to learn from you now in a reciprocal way, it is time to form a competitive business. Your boss also has to bow to productivity, earnings, efficiency, and other ways of shining either humbly or competitively.
@trendingthoughts67269 ай бұрын
I waiting for this Book 🥳🥳😃😃
@MoonLightOnWater19 ай бұрын
The book is MASTERY by Robert Green. This video is summarizing that book 😊
@digitalvictoria0469 ай бұрын
🥰loved
@ErnestM.glow-ph5cm4 ай бұрын
Well summarized. Hoping you would summerise " stumbling on happiness by Dan Gilbert " if you haven't.
@Astral_Artz7 ай бұрын
Thank you. Now i know i am, by definition, a master traditional artist. However, in today's economy...dreams die to society and inflation. I could help so many people if I could afford it. Every job these days require equipment or a license or a lack of morals. Just ridiculous 😒
@stephenhawkins33169 ай бұрын
Maybe the passion was ensuring the family was successful and the situation limited options thus a sacrifice was necessary to achive that passion.
@wilsoncapucci7 ай бұрын
I actually think uncle Bill's life is a good example of a great life. Not all great lifes look the same, but his is one version that consider to be that. Being a 'master' I'd say is one aspect of one version of a great life. Congrats to uncle Bill and to all the masters out there, they're all doing good
@tdarden4475 ай бұрын
You missed the point but I respect your opinion. There’s a whole lot of Uncle Bill’s out here that wished they’d done it differently. What you are describing is settling. Nothing wrong with that either. Going after what you’re passionate about is absolutely the better way to go
@loizospapaloizou94948 ай бұрын
I tend do believe one comes in life with a talent. Mine is software engineering. Other kids were playing football I was larrning C++ at 13 years old. Discover your talent, work around it and you will be happy and productive. Seen almost half of this video. It failed to convince me otherwise. Yes Mozart brought that talent with him, he wrote his first masterpiece at the age of 5. And also the other geniuses mentioned were talented.
@Strife40k9 ай бұрын
Thumbnail seems to imply that the person is the top of the average pile... To be exceptional, you must be at an extreme tail of the bell curve. Just sayin' 🤷 Love your vids though ❤
@LoffizAnimationer9 ай бұрын
Thought the same thing 😂
@griff75339 ай бұрын
Yup that’s why I’m here!! Pedants unite!!
@amdebrahan91899 ай бұрын
Me three
@faizanahmed21209 ай бұрын
I thought same things 😅😅
@arjunasandoval70894 ай бұрын
@@amdebrahan9189no one said “me too” 😂
@usaintltrade9 ай бұрын
WITH HARD WORK AND PRACTICE I AQUIRE SKILL 💜🏃♀️🕺🧍♀️👩🦯🧎♀️🧜♀️🧞♀️
@mrm88189 ай бұрын
There are plenty of roles that tie into peoples passion i.e. personal trainer, cook, teaching, nursing, zoo workers (plenty more) that employers know about and use to exploit young people into either working for very little money (apprentice) or do long hours in and not necessarily paid for. The work culture can be toxic as well. These roles i could believe would get your from beginner to mastery in no time. You will get there because of the hours you will be forced to put in and lack of energy to discover anything else. But don't let me put you off after all wtf do i know. Your being informed by a youtuber that is probably doing the same. I'd love to see her CPM vs hours put in and if the enthusiasm is still there if/when she gets to a million subs (well known to be a burn out point for youtubers).
@cfri93329 ай бұрын
I wish I could be jaded that there are so many opportunities to exploit me. Instead I'm surrounded by people with so much money and talent that they don't need anything from me, even for free.
@RichardHarlos7 ай бұрын
The corruption of some people and cultures doesn't negate the truth in this video. Doing what the video suggests **is** a sensible path toward mastery. If there are people who would seek to exploit you along that path, then the sensible advice is to be alert for such people and to avoid them whenever possible.
@SylkieDev8 ай бұрын
All these comments and no one talks about how Uncle Bill was a master. He was a master of taking care of his family but hey you can't monetize that, so that doesn't count right?
@mannysr677 ай бұрын
Love this comment.
@Carltheproducer9 ай бұрын
As always good content, you go girl!
@marcoglara20127 ай бұрын
The one problem with your advice. People don’t know what they wanna do for the rest of her life until it’s too late . Seriously, ask any high school or college student. They have no idea what they wanna do. We often change our minds mid life step.
@ShermanWestlake7 ай бұрын
I agree with you completely. I liked everything about this video -- except the use of the oft-repeated theory that it takes 10,000 hours to master anything. The message to anyone middle aged or older is: don't bother. You might not have 10,000 hours to master whatever you're interesting in doing.
@damziee75317 ай бұрын
Nice
@ybwang71249 ай бұрын
best way is to come up with your own system of the world instead of regurgitating someone else's, no offense to Robert
@animehyper929 ай бұрын
Hi.😊😊😊😊😊😊
@dragasan35719 ай бұрын
I really like this channel, but I'm 1:17 in and I couldn't disagree more. Mastering something these days doesn't amount to a whole lot as we must adapt to changes on a constant basis. Why do you think there are so many kids with Attention Deficit Disorder? It's not a disorder. Humans are simply adapting to a new fast changing world. Parallel processing is the key, not serial processing.
@mellofelow9 ай бұрын
I love this channel.. however, at this exact time, 1.20 in, I totally agree with you @dragonsan3571. There are many factors that make a career (master). And even if one is master at a craft, there will always be someone better. The idea is to stride to be the best you can be.
@Solstice_Studios2 ай бұрын
Great videos. Who do you use to animate these videos? I'm now subscribed ... im trying to start my own channel while simultaneously trying to find out what it is that I'm good at. These videos have come at a great time ... thank you for creating these
@yardie_football9 ай бұрын
What’s the name of your other channel that has over 1 million subscribers
@littlebitbetter79 ай бұрын
UN POCO MEJOR
@arijukajerome6 ай бұрын
Am helped thanks
@stevedavenport12027 ай бұрын
If you want to be in the 99th percentile, be talented.
@TimothyNyota7 ай бұрын
you missed the point
@stevedavenport12027 ай бұрын
@@TimothyNyota As a youth, I was good at languages. I had students who were equally passionate and dedicated to learning Spanish as me, but I always got better results because I had more talent than them.
@mannysr677 ай бұрын
This video feels a bit condescending to all the people who do what they must to survive or to care for their families. People who claim to pick themselves up by their bootstraps neglect to realize that this is actually impossible. Be grateful for your serendipity. The world can’t all be painters and book readers.
@robmurrah32248 ай бұрын
Uncle Bill still could have been a master. Van Gogh only painted for 10 years. Jimi Hendrix only played guitar for 12 years.
@SylkieDev8 ай бұрын
I'm looking through all these comments, no one seems to realize Uncle Bill probably was a master... at taking care of his family.
@mannysr677 ай бұрын
@@SylkieDev beautiful comment!
@zepi05069 ай бұрын
Do you have a version of your videos in Spanish
@littlebitbetter79 ай бұрын
www.youtube.com/@Unpocomejor1
@josa7209 ай бұрын
Stage 2: Apprenticeship Phase. Find a mentor - find someone who can teach you everything in a few weeks, and guide you through the process ... That's where mastery comes to a screeching halt. Because nobody's lining up give up their time for you. And even if you beg or pay somebody, it's likely this expert will be a impatient mentor and lousy teacher.
@RicardoSantos-oz3uj9 ай бұрын
Working for someone else as an apprentice would give you a mentor. Just make sure you are learning. Some people do not teach due to being afraid of losing their job. Money will also give you a mentor.
@silvershsadow20459 ай бұрын
Go to short course schools
@chijiiokeugorji9 ай бұрын
Nice video What software do you use to create this whiteboard animation?
@cage83309 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing this awesome content, well i should add that recently i been earning really good and consistent investing on trades with coach chris services
@johnnybarb1859 ай бұрын
@c35162 i was referred to his services by my mother in law when i had issues at the office some months ago, which paid off and i had to switch to a long term plan with him
@brenocavalcanti89309 ай бұрын
sir chris spencer has actually bailed me out financially more time i can actually remember, most times when my checks comes in late
@johnnybarb1859 ай бұрын
@c35162 his the real dear, im even stun subscribers out here even knows this money maker
@channelali78099 ай бұрын
Nice reviews, I clearly remember seeing his name on an article on cbs where he was being recommended
@polifemopaganvela10299 ай бұрын
a financial advisor plus mentor for me and my brother, Just made a profit withdrawal from my portfolio with him a couple hours back
@dmora23862 ай бұрын
The best and worst thing I ever did was "make my hobby a career". Guess what happens when you do that... Figure it out? You're old if you did, you're inexperienced if you didn't. You turned your play time, Into work time, but...a majority of the time, for someone else. So now you're not doing what you like for yourseld(except money), but for someone else, your employer. The ideal scenario is that you work for yourself but even then, you still wind up turning playtime into work time. Double edged sword, particularly if you have adhd, AuDHD, or high functional/low support autism. I think it's worse on the adhd side because you(I should say I) straight up get bored before I get to mastery. I literally lose interest and once that happens nothing brings that interest back.
@bradfordrusso74809 ай бұрын
Uncle Bill's story is NOT true of legendary actor James Cagney. He was America's favorite actor. Top box office draw for 3 years in a row. An extra-ordinary feat, only duplicated by one other person ... Shirley Temple, The Greatest child-star of all time. Yet, Cagney repeatedly stated that to him, acting was just a "job". Not a passion. He only did it to earn the money he needed to live the rest of his life and genuine passions.
@sidewallministries2377 ай бұрын
Well, technically, Mozart is a bad example, because he was a master at the age of five riding his first piano concerto.
@tilini8 ай бұрын
is the narrator Mayim Bialik?
@TimothyNyota7 ай бұрын
Lol she doesn't sound anything like Amy
@ariy77127 ай бұрын
@@TimothyNyota ofcourse you would know better 😏
@victoriheanacho31328 ай бұрын
Are you a girl or boy, your video is amazing 🤩 by the way
@littlebitbetter74 ай бұрын
👉📕 Buy the book here: amzn.to/419G0PE
@tonygombas4917 ай бұрын
You mean he didn’t have the courage, not that he didn’t have the guts .
@marcoglara20127 ай бұрын
Sounds like uncle Bill had it figured out….
@ShivamMishra-bd1kg6 ай бұрын
Paaji ganna tto acha h but kuch jagha tonny vali vide aa rhi thi achi nahi lagi vi😢
@user-mw2zl7cx3t9 ай бұрын
1st
@anhnguyenhong87704 ай бұрын
Phai. Toi Thu Khoa moi thoi dai cua Harvard ve Quan ly Fund. That.
@infamousdon826 ай бұрын
All these damn ads in the way
@loftyyn5 ай бұрын
I like your content but the drawing make me zone out , a lot of time I find my self watching the hand drawing and not listening ,I'm not hating I find your content very hepfull
@ariy77128 ай бұрын
Not at all helpful video! Truth is, we all need to pay bills and buy groceries! If everyone starts following their passion, this will Not pay bills! Watching such videos got one of my relatives brainwashed, and now he keeps saying he needs to follow his passion instead of working 9 to 5. So Guess what! Its been 3 years he still can't make money to pay his bills. His family pays for him, after losing his job, he lost his financial freedom and independence, because of chasing his "passion and dreams". Be practical and separate your job and passion! Passion can be done as a hobbie to fulfill your inner desire but if you dont work then you live on the streets or be dependent on your family! These video are here to make money for their channel, its good click bait but Not practical advise! These can be dangerous and such people should be sued for palying with young minds!
@TimothyNyota7 ай бұрын
This video isn't for everyone. If you are weak minded, it would be advisable to avoid it
@ariy77127 ай бұрын
@TimothyNyota Weakness can be seen in your comment, shows you can't handle healthy criticism and facts well.
@ariy77127 ай бұрын
@TimothyNyota and if your lame excuse is "this video isn't for everyone " lol then you better inform youtube to insert a parental guidance alert in the beginning..
@edwardcardenales2 ай бұрын
❤ Do you have a spanish version of your videos?
@Delta22317 ай бұрын
This is really bad advice. High passion career fields like the arts and entertainment, outdoor sciences etc pay poorly. Unintuitively valuable domains like software development electrical engineering etc pay really well. The true key to all this is identifying the market need first and doing what it takes to build new passion around it.
@viktorianas8 ай бұрын
Statistically only 1% can outperform 99%, so this is an extremely dangerous concept you are trying to sell here. The reality is that very few people can follow their passions and make a living out of it. My guess you have at least 1000 actor wannabees to every 1 successful, even worse odds to become NBA player, etc. First and foremost market dictates what is in demand.
@kashifali-ug1yk5 ай бұрын
This channel seems an advertisement summary channel rather than book summary channel... frustrating to continue listening book summary
@jessicawinslet6845 ай бұрын
Omg stop stealing from other books lol do a video how steal ideas from well known books, not watching this. Tief.
@lakumcchang35389 ай бұрын
@littlebitbetter how do i connect to you?
@KaysProduct8 ай бұрын
I never took time to look for you name. But I think that it is because I see you just like a TV show talker who says things that work but cares for no one in particular. I know that between the time you should spend reading all the books you advertise here in your videos and the time to prepare so well structured presentations you have no time left to go through all that people say to you in comments. There was a time when I started showing to the world what I really have, I joined a group in LinkedIn. All my posts were reaching 1000 comments. Why? I used to debate what people were saying about what I was posting. They got to know who I'm by what I had as skills and some would appear just to say something for me to give my opinion to what they said. After that you could see that the person would start to shine in the group just because they felt that I debated their view. We all love to be loved by those who are greater and who appear to get more than us. Why do I say this to you? I told you that I do not know your name. I've have to look in your profile or to search in a different way for me to get it. But I also told you that I just see you to be an interesting TV show maker who has good stories to tell. I do not see you as a friend. So I do not see the need to know your name. Is my memory card of names full in my mind? Do I see it hard to look for it and keep it even if I do not see you as a friend? The only real reason is that internet is out of reach for me. I can just go to stand before the window of a friend who is a neighbor and take one of your videos. Then I would watch it at home and write all this being offline and go back to post it. Then since you are not a friend and you will never call me by my name answering my message I see it struggling to stand there more time to look for your name. But this is not what I was going for when I took on me to write to you in your video today. You said some truths in this video. And I loved the summary that you made at the 20th minute to the end. Yet, I told you here once that what you brag about in these books that you read should be taken as essential truths neither by you nor by all your listeners. He/she is what they are and wrote what they wrote. But it is in no way true just because it is written and shown in your channel. One day Jesus was attacked by those who were continually reproaching anything he could do. He took the speech and said that by nature men always have something to say against who shows up. He showed how they attacked John the Baptist who came before him and how they still have things to say about him even though he was different. And he concluded saying: "All the same, wisdom is proved righteous by its works." It is in the gospel book of Matthew chapter 11. What then? No matter how smart your writer may appear to you what he will say is debatable. Do not spend your time making ad of what he said. Prove the rightousness of your wisdom by its works. Show what you know and demonstrate what you saw. By practical and real life examples you will be unchallengeable. What I saw working stands as true to me until I see something different working differently. You do not convince me by quoting your authors and showing that your are a good reader. 😢 Don't misunderstand me I know that you really give good and very practical examples of how to apply what you say but let it be like you prefer. I say what I feel. It is sign of weakness on your part the continual using of other's names to support what you want to teach. Look at this. You say that one should have social intelligence to make it. Yes, I agree that you should know how people feel to interact with them. It involves not trying to impress all the time and trying to see people as they are in matters of education and culture. But you said earlier that Mozart, Einstein and others did not care about what others felt and this is what made them great. So what is the best way to make it? You should care or you should not? What others think matters or not to make it? Let me tell you what you had to say. "If you want to succeed in field like entrepreneurship and marketing be very careful for what others are and feel but if you want to invent and discover dash what others think of you and believe that your success depends on what you think is true." This would be better said, wouldn't it? Furthermore , you said that in the process of learning you should agree to be paid very low for you to have less stress and to be allowed to make more mistakes. But how can you be the best if you decide to fight only those who are less strong than you? Can you be a champion if you compete only against losers? Where is it better to list yourself to see how strong you are? Is it in the championship of you city or in the world cup? Pressure, uncertainty failure and all the rest is what makes you strong. If you decide to be less paid for you to train and pass to fight later you may remain there for two lives and never make it. I'm African. I'm poor. I'm illiterate. But when I write online like now if I never told you who I'm you will believe all that I'll say. I can start by saying that I've a Master degree in languages. I would add that I made years of training in making videos and ads on channels of platforms like KZbin and nothing would sound untrue to you. I've always fought the biggest and the best. I lost too often. But I learnt and I never gave up. So today I'm about to be impossible to be employed because of the skills I've. Your author was wrong in these two areas. So there is no need to brag boastfully about them. On the other hand, take time to read and debate the comments posted here. You may get more than what your books give. Here there is a totally different kind of intelligence. It is more than social intelligence. It is real life intelligence.