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Sierra Crest Business Law - November 2020

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Sierra Crest Business Law - November 2020

775.448.6070

November 2020

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DO YOU HAVE A FIXED MINDSET OR A GROWTH MINDSET? HOW CAROL DWECK’S BOOK ‘MINDSET’ CHANGED THE WAY I SEE OTHERS

missteps in the process. In the art scenario, someone with a growth mindset would see their potential and get excited about learning, while someone with a fixed mindset would be too afraid to pick up a pen or brush.

When I am driving around town, one of my favorite things to do is listen to a good audiobook. This fall, I’ve been absorbed in “Mindset: The New Psychology of Success” by Carol Dweck, a nonfiction read that explores what people like you and me can do to live up to our potential. In “Mindset,” Dweck argues that there are two different mindset types: the fixed mindset and the growth mindset. If you have a fixed mindset, then you think that you were born with a certain set of talents and abilities that determines your life. People with fixed mindsets believe that they’ve either hit the genetic lottery or they haven’t. But if you have a growth mindset, you think that you can pick up new skills with a little work. People with growth mindsets believe that everyone has a bit of every talent in them and that they can always learn and grow. Since I started reading the book, I’ve had my antennae up for examples of a growth mindset. Recently, I saw it in one of my clients, a man in his 60s who sold his interest in a business and retired. Instead of setting up a chair by the lake, he went back to school to participate in a yearlong >Page 1 Page 2 Page 3 Page 4

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