Once you start reading more deeply into child development, you realize you have an unimaginable amount of power in shaping them to win
>the name you give them (+power it brings)
>environment you let them grow in
>treating them from day one as the person you hope they will become
Thankful to God for 11 months so far, through the highs and lows, the ups and downs, i’m grateful to have gone through this year, so far, with God by my side.
People often speak of the sacrifices parents make for their children, but almost no one acknowledges the quiet compromises children make for their parents.
So many of us grew up watching our parents struggle, and instinctively softened ourselves to spare them pain. We learned to swallow our wants before they ever became requests. We picked up a book in a shop, only to put it back the moment we overheard them discussing the month’s budget. We pretended school excursions didn’t interest us because we knew the extra fee would tighten things at home.
We hid our heartbreaks, adjusted our dreams, and chose nearer or lesser colleges....not for lack of ambition, but because we sensed the burden our choices could bring. These are the small, invisible sacrifices of childhood, the ones no one writes poems about, yet they shape us just as deeply.
1. Algebra is good for problem-solving.
2. Geometry is good for visual thinking.
3. Calculus is good for understanding change.
4. Statistics is good for decision-making.
5. Number theory is good for logical discipline.
6. Linear algebra is good for modern science and engineering.
7. Discrete math is good for computer science.
8. Differential equations are good for modeling the real world.
9. Optimization is good for smart planning.
10. Graph theory is good for network thinking.
11. Set theory is good for structured reasoning.
12. Practice is good for mathematical fluency.
13. Curiosity is good for lifelong learning in math.