1. Mozart
Mozart is recognized as a child prodigy in the history of music. He showed his extraordinary talent and talent in music very early on. From Mozart's childhood, you can see a child's positive attitude toward music and his persistent pursuit of an artistic career. Although not everyone can be a genius, for the majority of children, "Prodigy Mozart" is definitely a legendary and good example worth learning from.
As a child, Mozart often walked to the piano, pressed the keys, listened carefully, and tried to play the music he had heard. Once, Mozart's father went home with his friends and saw 4-year-old Mozart sitting at the table writing. His father asked him what he was doing, and Mozart said he was writing a piano concerto. My father took a look at the staff paper and was so excited that he shed tears. He said to his friend: "Look, what he wrote is correct and meaningful!" Talent, diligence and hard work, this is the child prodigy Mozart! p>
Understand that diligence is a necessity for success.
2. Newton
Newton was very attentive in studying knowledge. One day, his friends were treating him to dinner. During the dinner, he remembered a bottle of wine at home, so he told his friends to wait a moment while he went home to get the wine. The friend waited and waited, but did not see Newton coming back, so he had to go and see what was going on. It turned out that Newton remembered an experiment on his way home. When he got home, he plunged into the laboratory and started doing the experiment, forgetting all about getting wine to entertain his friends.
It is amazing to understand people's thoughts. As long as you focus on a certain cause, you will definitely achieve results that surprise you.
3. Beethoven
One day, Beethoven came to a restaurant for dinner. After ordering, he suddenly had an inspiration, so he picked up the recipe on the table and composed music on the back of it. After a while, he was completely immersed in the beautiful melody. When the waiter saw Beethoven's very engaged look, he didn't dare to disturb him, but planned to wait for a while before serving him food.
About an hour later, the waiter finally came to Beethoven: "Sir, will you serve?" Beethoven immediately paid for the meal as if he had just woken up from a dream. The waiter, like a monk, was confused: "Sir, you haven't eaten yet!" "No! I'm sure I've already eaten." Beethoven couldn't listen to the waiter's repeated explanations, and he paid according to the price on the menu. After that, he grabbed the menu filled with musical notes and rushed out of the restaurant.
Impressions From this little thing, we see how focused Beethoven was when he was creating. The weakest person can achieve good results as long as he concentrates his power on one point. On the contrary, the strongest person will achieve nothing if he spreads his power in many directions.