It still astounds me how the world of Hive is full of possibilities. And take it from me as a person who's been working on the least amount of possible things from which I can make money. I could probably count the communities I have posted on prior to this year with one hand. I still don't need all my fingers to count the communities in which I posted. But, the point is...
There's Always Room For Improvement
You're not a wall. You're not some object created to serve one purpose. You're a human capable of diving into anything. I am not saying go and learn how to perform brain surgery, but in Hive, you can actually go read about brain surgeries and reflect on what you learned, you can even talk about how you felt reading about brain surgeries. Even why you did it is enough to ground to create a post.
Being stagnate is your worst enemy. I know there's always a fear of trying something new or having a different hobby or interest. But, that's literally the beauty about Hive: Everyone on the blockchain shares those feelings, therefore, understanding if someone fails at it.
Failure is the best thing that could happen to you. It's the holy grail of learning as you process the reasons behind a failure. Your world won't end because of a bad Hive post. But, it will end once you decide to limit yourself and what you should do. Be open to everything.
Yes, there are some things that you simply don't have an interest in. Mine personally, is Hive games. I talked about this previously, but I simply don't find interest in pursuing them. Not that I don't see the value, in fact I know I am missing a lot, but I am simply not interested.
The Joy Of Being On Listnerds
That's what the accumulation of being on Listnerds is all about. You get to read all those people posting in their field of expertise and if you're reading well enough, you could pick up so much and benefit in your content-creating journey.
I learned that I actually do have something to offer LeoFinance by reading posts there that were shared on ListNerds because I know that most people won't be sharing something on ListNerds without actually believing in it.
It's also how I learned it's not that "I don't have the time" preventing me from playing all the games on Hive, but rather me not being interested in them. The way I see it, that's more than okay as it freed me to pursue things I like even harder.
I spend hours a day searching different things between films and football all the way to economy and even neuroscience. It's fun knowing that you have a place no matter your interest. Yes, you could fail. But, I would say failure isn't only okay, but it's actually a good thing.
Failure As A Short-Term Goal
I have seen many posts where people share their Hive goals. The one thing I found in common is that there is a post that had a 100% success rate. The authors of those posts almost skim through the stuff they succeeded at, but they reflect a lot on the areas where they failed.
I would say, set up your long-term goals, but always include a short-term goal of failure. You don't want it to be too easy, trust me. Include a part that is almost impossible to accomplish. That part will be the place where you learn the most, trust me.
I have listened/read to all of those big-name creators and it was always their posts about where they failed or something went wrong that taught them the most. We are on Hive because of a big failure on Steemit that taught most people here a great lesson.
The best lesson I realized this year was the beauty of failure. That's why my biggest goal this year is Taking My Father To The Only World Cup We Can Attend an almost impossible goal and I am already learning so much because of that.