Pausing for a Sense of Wonder Can Boost Learning and Goal Achievement
Feeling a sense of wonder about learning or pursuing a goal is a way of celebrating in advance — and it can help you get there, too.
Outside my house there’s a long, steep set of stairs to the top of a hill. Up there, you can sit at a picnic table and look out on a beautiful view: green hills, little white houses, and beyond them, the ocean.
When I moved here six months ago, I was so out of shape I couldn’t walk up those stairs without stopping to rest. I avoided them, because it was unpleasant.
But a couple days ago, I realized I was quick-stepping up them all the way to the top. A lot of strenuous walking and Pilates had paid off.
You often hear people say nobody ever really changes, but they do. Those changes might not, in most cases, go deep into who we are.
But they do happen, and when they do, it’s a minor miracle — bringing good things into our reach that had been impossible before.
Any major undertaking will change you through the effort and effects on your life. It will affect those around you as well, because they’ll experience the changed you in their world.
Learning something new, specifically, means you’re creating lots of positive changes: