"When you grow up without much, your brain learns to solve problems differently. You can't just throw money at something. You have to think."
"Psychologist Albert Bandura spent decades studying what he called self-efficacy, the belief in your own ability to figure things out and influence outcomes."
"Repeated encounters with problems you successfully solve, even imperfectly, wire your brain to approach the next challenge with confidence rather than helplessness."
"Every broken appliance, every tight budget, every improvised solution was a quiet lesson in capability."
Growing up in a financially constrained environment encourages individuals to develop problem-solving skills and self-efficacy. Children learn to fix things rather than replace them, fostering creativity and resourcefulness. Psychologist Albert Bandura's research on self-efficacy highlights that repeated successful problem-solving experiences build confidence. Those from lower-middle-class and working-class backgrounds in the 1960s and 70s gained these experiences daily, learning capability through necessity. This upbringing instills a unique intelligence that thrives on overcoming challenges without reliance on financial resources.
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