The
Normal Curve is in the shape of a bell, with few at the low end and few at the
high end and most in the middle. Our talents can be identified specifically and
these individual talents follow the normal curve.
We can
have specific talents for art, athletics and academics. Our artistic talents
can be segmented into playing music, singing, performing, drawing, painting,
decorating and designing. Our athletic
talents can be segmented into gymnastics, playing baseball, football or other
sports. Our academic talent can be
measured by reading speed, comprehension and knowledge.
Our
interests will affect our choices in what talents we are drawn to develop. We
usually like to do what we are good at.
But is possible to give up some of the things we are good at to do other
things we also love to do or for practical reasons. It is possible to be good
at something, but you can take it or leave it.
We usually don’t do well with things we are not good at and we often
lose all interests in things we are not good at. Some of our choices have to do with age,
physical ability and time. It’s not uncommon to give up hobbies to pursue a
career we can use to earn a living.
Our
expertise in exercising our talents may be natural or developed. Some find that
exercising their talent is easy; they are gifted. These are students who don’t
need to struggle to learn; they are quick to understand most subject matter.
There are gifted artists who create perfect drawings and paintings with no
apparent effort. There are athletes who can study certain moves and replicate
them and that is the “mental” part of some sports. They have the kind of
exceptional mind-body control we see in expert gymnasts, skaters and divers.
There are
other characteristics that are developed around out talents. Leadership often
comes from knowing what to do. These leaders are keen to learn everything they
can about their work and they become experts. They become leaders when others
follow them. If they become irritating for others to deal with, they are stuck
just being experts. Leaders that others follow are also blessed with
credibility that may derive from being trusted. That is the role that character
plays in developing leadership.
Leaders
have varying degrees of curiosity, motive and a sense of mission. They usually
have the ability to look at things and improve them. If they are accomplishment
oriented, they want to fix things they have identified as needing
improvement. They will go wherever they
need to go to find what they love to do.
Activities
most people regard as hobbies can turn into careers if you’re good enough. I
have a dear friend from high school named Mike Peters. He is a Pulitzer Prize
winning cartoonist who has had a very successful career as an Editorial
Cartoonist, the creator of the comic strip “Mother Goose and Grim” and his
website is Grimmy Inc. Mike started to draw as soon as he could hold a
pencil. He loved Disney cartoons and
drew them through his grade school years.
He drew like a talented adult professional by the time he entered high
school. He was a child prodigy. After
high school he received a BFA degree and joined “Stars and Stripes”. After his
military service, he joined the Sun Times as an editorial cartoonist. He later became the Editorial Cartoonist for
the Dayton Daily News. He syndicated
after winning the Pulitzer and has been cartooning ever since. Mikes teachers
would always tell him that he can’t draw cartoons forever and he would just
smile knowing that they were wrong. Mike
was at the top of the normal curve as a cartoonist.
I’ve
known other child prodigies including actresses Marsha Mason and Mary Frann
Luecke. They were not like most other girls.
They knew what they wanted to do from an early age and spent their time
honing their craft. Marsha was addicted
to the stage and became a major star and film director. Mary Frann was very
poised and focused. She worked as a child model and became the first “America’s
Junior Miss” when she was 18. She worked in movies and is best know for her TV
role on the Bob Newhart Show.
There is
a normal curve for everything. Some are at the bottom and some are at the top
and most are somewhere in the middle.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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