Balance car is too difficult to learn

The front wheels are round, the back wheels are round, the feet step on the earth, the hands hold two handlebars, the old man ran out of legs, the child is happy gaga.

Tonight, I'm going to learn how to ride a balance bike, and I'm going to see the kid on the bike, and I'm going to see him on the bike, and I'm going to see him on the bike, and I'm going to see him on the bike, and I'm going to see him on the bike, and I'm going to see him on the bike.

I could barely keep up with the fast wheels, but as soon as I let go of my hand, Chatterjee would fall over. I tried not to hold the handlebars at the start, but Glitch said, "I'm scared, I'm going to fall," and before I could take my hand off the handlebars, she was scared and wanted to get off.

Yeah, she's too young to be able to balance the car while moving forward. Last time, she was walking. Last time, she mastered the balance of standing! In the future, she would have to master balance in swimming, balance in dancing, and if she wanted to, she could learn to master balance in surfing, and even balance in bungee jumping. Forget about balance in wingsuit flying, that was really the limit of humanity.

Besides the learning of non-balance states in sports, there's also the balance between learning and exercise, independence and dependence, family and career, growth and comfort, material and spiritual.

Of all the balances, the one I find the most difficult to master, and the one that hurts the most, is the balance of certainty versus uncertainty, the balance of the known versus the unknown, the balance of control versus loss of control.

The so-called growth is what happens as a result of learning in a non-equilibrium state.

The so-called gain is the discovery of structural power in the sense of being out of control.

To be successful is to dance on the tip of a rocking wave.

Suddenly, after learning to balance a bike for a long time, I'm still afraid of the unbalanced state, but how can growth leave the unbalanced state?

The so-called continuous growth is to continue to learn by jumping out of the ability trap into a new unbalanced state.

Continuing to reap the rewards of being in control of a moderately out-of-control scenario over and over and over again.

The so-called sustained success is a bit of a luxury for me at the moment, grow first!