Mindset Basics
The Power of Yet
Brain Power
Resilience
Social Environment
100

This is the belief that you can get smarter and more skilled through hard work, good strategies, and help from others.

Growth Mindset

100

Adding this three-letter word to the end of "I can't do this" changes a dead end into a challenge that is "under construction."

YET

100

This term describes the brain's amazing ability to change, grow, and create new connections throughout your life.

Neuroplasticity

100

Often called "mental toughness," this is the ability to recover quickly from difficulties or mistakes.

Resilience

100

This is the feeling of being thankful and appreciative for the good things in life, which helps build a growth mindset.

Gratitude

200

While a growth mindset is the "engine" that powers you, this part of the "car" gives that power a direction and tells your brain exactly where you want to go.

Personal Mission Statement

200

This strategy involves catching a negative thought like "I'm not good at this" and turning it into a growth opportunity like "I can build this skill with practice."

Mindset Shifting (or Flipping the Script)

200

Practice builds this "protective layer" around your neurons, which can make electrical signals in your brain travel up to 100 times faster.

Myelin

200

In a growth mindset, a mistake isn't a "stop sign"; it is treated as this type of sign, meaning you just need to find a new route.

Detour Sign

200

This term describes a group of people who might discourage change or feel threatened when you start to make progress.

Fixed Circle

300

In a Fixed Mindset, people believe that this factor is the only thing that creates success. 

Talent (or Natural Ability)

300

In the "Growth Mindset Tool Kit," this is the third and final step you must take after noticing your inner voice and adding the word "Yet."

Seek a New Strategy

300

This part of the brain handles the "fight or flight" stress response; positive self-talk helps lower its reaction so high-level learning can happen.

Amygdala

300

While a Fixed Thinker sees a challenge as a "Wall" and stops, a Growth Thinker uses resilience to see the wall as an opportunity to take this type of step in an new direction.

Pivot

300

This term refers to the "data" we get from a solid circle of support to help us get better, rather than seeing it as a personal attack.

Feedback (or Honest Feedback

400

Because your brain is always listening to your internal narrator, the slides refer to you as this—the person drawing the "blueprints" for how your brain will function tomorrow.

Architect

400

Using the "Power of Yet" is a form of Self-Awareness because it helps you realize that this type of thought is just a temporary feeling, not a permanent fact.

Fixed Thought (or Limiting Belief)

400

This is the specific reason why making mistakes is actually better for your brain than getting everything right the first time.

Building Neural Connections (or Strengthening Myelin

400

This "mental armor" is created through Affirmations, which train your inner voice to stay strong against doubt and discouragement.

Positive Self-Talk

400

Just as a plant needs soil and light, your mindset is heavily influenced by this—the people and influences you choose to surround yourself with.

Social Environment or Circle

500

Small, daily actions that provide the "fuel" to reach your goals. 

Habits

500

Using "Yet" transforms a challenge from a "Dead End" into this specific 2-word status, meaning the solution is currently being built.

Under Construction

500

In the "Neuro-Feedback Loop," this happens to your brain's energy when you tell yourself a task is "impossible."

stops wasting energy on it (or it shuts down high-level learning)

500

This is the specific difference (street sign) between how a Fixed Mindset and a Growth Mindset view a mistake.

Stop Sign vs. a Detour Sign

500

Name 1 of the three specific steps mentioned in the slides for intentionally establishing a "Growth Circle."

1. Identify Values

2. Evaluate People

 3. Seek Out Active Listners