Patience is confidence. You must teach your child to be like a noble lion, calm, sharp, and directed toward the goal instead of a frightened prey running around and panicking. \”I know this is hard for you, so do it.\” Mistakes are expected, but it is even more valuable if you are serious about finding solutions. \”When I tell my children this, they often don\’t accept the relief I give, and they still fall into self-blame. Among them, \”But I only got two out of ten questions right. I\’m such a rubbish!\” He even didn\’t want to face me anymore and ran outside by himself, feeling very depressed. These words are by no means meant to comfort people and make them feel comfortable. Rather, I know that they need to make mistakes to discover their strengths and that they need time to grow into their true abilities. I must stand patiently and firmly by their side. I don’t like to give children very simple questions, but directly give them more challenging questions. They need to read the meaning of the question more carefully, have a deeper understanding of the concept, and need to integrate past and present knowledge more carefully. Think deeply. It is not easy to do the right thing, it is something that requires calmness, patience, and thinking to do well. There are always a lot of emotions at the beginning, but as time goes by, their ability to regulate themselves gets better and better. When you do something right, celebrate quickly and get back to work immediately. If you haven\’t done something right yet, there\’s no need to be particularly frustrated. Find the problem immediately, quickly correct it, and then get back to work on the new one. Right and wrong are just part of growing up. But why do children fall directly into self-blame before we blame them? Because we have been taught since childhood that time is really precious, so we must race against time. So, get it right as quickly as possible. If you don\’t do it right, you lose patience with yourself and start to disappoint, accuse, and attack yourself. How is it possible for a child to always get it right quickly and well? When a child feels the pressure of time and performance, in addition to feeling oppression, anxiety, and worry, can he gain the real joy of learning and the ability to face challenges? When children learn new knowledge, we immediately give them more exercises. Even primary school children don\’t go to bed until ten or eleven o\’clock. If you haven\’t mastered it after tonight, you may fall behind tomorrow and be unable to keep up with the teacher\’s lessons and rhythm. In order to stand out, even if you are on vacation, you must increase the dose to feel at ease. All people are focused on the results and want to get the best grade or the highest score. They are taught to constantly accumulate more experience than others, to look for better shortcuts, to want to omit unnecessary processes and jump directly to the most practical parts. Once the process is more difficult than they imagined, they will easily become discouraged and fall into self-doubt and disappointment. \”Why am I so stupid?\” \”Why can\’t I compare to others?\” \”Am I really as bad as they say?\” This is the voice in the heart of every child (adults) when they face pressure and frustration. Same thing). If adults continue to urge them, criticize them, and scold them harshly, they will undoubtedly bePushed into the abyss. This is why children are becoming more and more vulnerable now. They have no chance to restore their own energy and no ability to find their own inner peace. Therefore, adults must be more patient than children. When we have more patience and support for our children, we give them time, allow them to make mistakes, and encourage them to constantly try and explore new methods in the process. In this way, their inner minds will slowly begin to transform, and the neural pathways of their brains will get new training, no longer just in a state of anxiety and panic. When a child has patience with himself, is not afraid of making mistakes, and tries bravely, he will have real concentration. There is no inner voice that will frequently interfere, and no external things can easily shake you. You can concentrate carefully, be calm, and do what you want to do patiently. It\’s like the concentration of an archer aiming his arrow at the bull\’s-eye, or the calmness of a lion observing his prey. Not only does it inspire new ideas, it also sharpens observations and prompts us to discover more connections. It\’s like a key to breaking the situation, kept in his pocket.