Hi Hive Lovers
You can freely define success according to your own opinion. Everyone has their own point of view when interpreting success.
Many people think that being smart is the only way to achieve success. In fact, it is not enough to make a person fully successful.
Smart is like a commodity in a person, and to make it a more valuable product, a process is needed. Smart is like a diamond in a mine or a pearl in a shell. Without further processing, he is just an object, but after going through a certain process, it will have a more valuable value.
Smart alone is not enough, because there are other things that are most basic, namely:
Honesty
The most basic thing is honesty. Compared to someone who is smart, it will be more fun to work with someone who has honesty.
But it would be better if intelligence were accompanied by honesty. Because if there is no honesty, then nothing can be changed for the good.
Time
Another basic thing to achieving success is that it takes a long time-it also depends on your perception of what success means.
There is no success that can be achieved in an instant and it also cannot be obtained in a short time. You have to take time and spend your life achieving it. Be patient because you will be successful in time.
Sacrifice
Sacrifice is also a fundamental thing in realizing success. You get nothing if you don't sacrifice anything, whether it's the pain of fighting or a commitment to resisting the temptations that keep you from achieving success.
All three will affect a person's mindset in achieving success. It is a fundamental factor that is very important as a process to real success.
Diamonds are buried in the earth and pearls are in shells at the bottom of the ocean.
Diamonds and pearls have been forged with an honest process to keep them pure and precious.
Diamonds and pearls have been processed for a long time in an unknown place before, and
Diamonds and pearls have also been processed with their sacrifices to become something of value and worth.
There is no way that can be done to change a person's perception of "just being smart is not enough," other than that person must be able to learn from his own experience or take lessons from the experiences of others.