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The movie "Coach Carter"

#头条创作挑战赛 #

Who says watching Netflix is a waste of time?

I watched a very inspirational and bloody movie "Coach Carter" on Netflix yesterday.

The film tells the story of a basketball coach, Carter, who is hired to teach a group of players with bad attitudes and behavior, and help change their lives.

In addition to the plot attraction of the movie, I also learned some life principles.

Here are seven things I learned.

The movie "Coach Carter"

1. If you want others to respect you, you need to respect yourself first

The players in the movie didn't respect themselves well at first.

The coach said to them, "In the future, you will add "Sir" to the title. That's what I call you." And he requires players to wear neat attire because that's what is professional.

If even you don't respect yourself, how can you get others to respect you?

2. If you want, fight for it

Every second on the pitch is a need to win. Everyone has to give 150% effort to win the game. If you want to win, you have to find your own rhythm and not be affected by fear.

The coach said this to the players during the falling game.

3. Learning to control temper is a high-level person

The players initially had low emotional intelligence, liked to talk to others in the trash, and were easily annoyed. This affects their performance. Coaches train players to control their temper and not be influenced by others.

Because high-level players do not lose their temper casually and remain stable in any situation.

The movie "Coach Carter"

4. Background is not a limitation

In the eyes of the coach, students have the opportunity to go to college, regardless of their background and location. He doesn't judge players based on their results and look down on them like everyone else.

He will treat the players as "college students" and ask them to do what a college student should do.

5. Winning or losing is important, but attitude is more important

After winning the game, the players went their own way and forgot the promises they made to their coaches at the beginning.

The coach ended up suspending his participation in the game and training. He asked the players to keep their promises because there were other important things to focus on besides the game.

Being a winner doesn't mean you can be empty-eyed either.

6. People who support you are sometimes wrong

The coach requires the student to "attend class" and "pass the test". The players couldn't do it at first, so the coach stopped playing and training.

This action has aroused opposition from teachers and parents. They think that playing basketball is everything, and nothing else matters. They think the coach is vexatious.

It's important to have someone who supports you, but their support may not be beneficial to you.

7. Understand your "deepest" fears

Coaches often ask players, "What is your greatest fear?"

If you don't know what you fear most, you can't be your truest self. When you choose to escape fear, you pretend to be someone else. When you choose to run away from fear, you cannot achieve your fullest potential.

The movie "Coach Carter"

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