Recently, there has been a continuous trend among us all to be an early bird in all walks of life. Every individual has been pushing himself to be early at each and every stage to be guaranteed of success. Be it the case of a teen who wants to be an early bird to join coaching centers or a youngster fighting for a dream job, or an 60 year old setting his retirement plans, no one wants to be late at anything at any stage. This awareness among then all might sound very responsible to all but thinking about it from both sides would give you an immense shock on how unreasonable were you regarding such an important decision of your life.

We’ll be discussing this matter through in the coming content but the only thing I would like my readers to follow while reading this content is to learn to analyze both sides of any decision that you take.

Let us keenly observe the life progress of any infant born in the late 90’s or later. You will observe that a very high percentage of the population of these infants are targeted by this early bird disorder. Now I call this a disorder not because it’s any kind of a physical or mental disorder but because it needs to be treated like a psychological bug that has been persistent over the years in the kids.

Understanding the fact that at any given age if you jeopardize your present to care for your future endeavors, it certainly going to affect in one way or the other. A 10 year old kid of today has a lot more to think about than we think he has. He has a his grades to improve, he has to be constantly updated about the coaching centers producing best results, so that he can join one after a a couple of years. His body development, self confidence, moral values, self esteem are long lost. As he grows up he is facing constant ups and downs in academics and frequently falls under pressure if fails to handle them.

Starting to learn early is never sinful, but taking it as serious as anything and creating an issue out ofit that not only affects your present but also generates an irrational pressure for your future is never a good decision.

Consider a student studying in his high school. He is determined that he wants to for civil services like IAS, RAS etc. Depending upon his interests in political and administrative subjects and other capabilities. Now whenever he is reading a subject he would always be matching his readings with the consistency of the UPSE exam. The boy will not be able to enjoy the subject and feel the depth that the subject holds within. Rather, it would always bother him if or not his learning is consistent with the exam that he has to face some 10 years from now. This ridicules the raw, pure learning that the student must be taking on and takes him to totally objective mind that is unfit for him, at the current stage.

Apart from this, we can talk all day long about the different early birds that we see around, but I think we have talked all of it through and I hope this would give our readers in deep thoughts which would ultimately improve some lives.

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