I think of grit as a combination of growth and tenacity. As Angela Lee Duckworth said in The Significance of Grit resilience is not the only trait needed to be gritty. It’s also about being able to stay focused on your goals and keep pushing forward to achieve those goals. Grit is …show more content…
They are not related at all and do not affect the other. Talented people might be very successful, but that does not mean they are gritty. Gritty people may work very hard, but that does not mean they are talented. Talent comes naturally. Grit is built. Here’s an example to help from the significance of grit that will explain it better. Talented taxi drivers might be able to find fares easily and make 200 dollars in five hours. If they are not gritty, chances are, they will stop working once they hit their quota for the day. Gritty taxi drivers will keep working, even if they hit their quota. Gritty people put in hard work and effort into everything they do. There is no ceiling for gritty …show more content…
It determines how well I’ll be able to do in school. High school was a time where having grit was very important. I went to a high school that had higher standards than most high schools in San Francisco. All the students would start taking ap classes their sophomore year, and a few insanely gifted were doing precalculus in freshman year. I tried to keep up with what was normal and took 2-3 ap classes a year. I had decent grades during freshman year, but as I started taking more and more ap classes and harder classes, I couldn’t keep up. It’s not that I couldn’t keep up, I was just too tired to keep up. The work piled up and my grades were going down. This trend would continue throughout junior and senior year. I managed to pass my classes, but at Lowell, that’s not enough to go anywhere. In a school where all the students are extremely talented or hard working, just passing won’t get you into a UC. Even students with 3.7 or 3.8 gpas were rejected by UCs. If they went to any other school they would have got in most if not all the UCs. Going to Lowell lowered their chances of going to a good UC, but they had some of the best teachers, were offered plenty of classes, and they were all truly pushed to their limits at Lowell. Lowell offered you a chance to push yourself academically. I didn’t take that chance. I didn’t have the grit to accept their challenge so I put myself in a hole. I didn’t hold on and push through when things got