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100% of your donations go directly to Paskalina.

Paskalina is a student from Tanzania who needs $130 to fund her education.

$0 raised
$130 to go
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Paskalina John
An experience which I had in my life was to fail in mathematics. The most difficulty I have had is coming to school late. This taught me to wake up in order to be at school at an acceptable time. The moment that I felt proud of myself was at my birthday ceremony. My dream is to become a lecturer at a university of tourism. After reaching my dream, I will come back to my society to teach them how to promote the environment. If I had the power to change my society, I would like to change the sector of education in order to get many professional people, such as teachers and doctors.

Birthday: 2008

Gender: Female

Favorite Classes: Agriculture

I Want to Be: lecturer

Hobbies: playing netball and studying

Family: father, mother, 1 sister, 1 grandmother

O-Level School: Ganako Secondary School

Funding for Form 4 2025:
Tuition, Exams, Uniform   $130

TOTAL   $130
Funding for Form 3 2024: $150
Funding for Form 2 2023: $150
Paskalina's Journal
177 Entries
Hello family, here is the paradox of mastery, that explains on how to let go of old strategies that are no longer useful and put in to innovations.

The Paradox of Mastery
In 1921, an Austrian philosopher named Ludwig Wittgenstein concluded his Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus with the following passage:

“My propositions are elucidatory in this way: he who understands me finally recognizes them as senseless, when he has climbed out through them, on them, over them. (He must so to speak throw away the ladder, after he has climbed up on it.)”
In simple terms, Wittgenstein is arguing the following:

The philosophical statements he just laid out are only useful to get you to a certain level of understanding.
Once you achieve that level, you will realize those statements were a means to an end—and now that you’ve reached that end, you no longer need them.
Therefore, those statements should be discarded, like a ladder you’ve climbed and no longer need.
The concept—which became known as Wittgenstein’s Ladder—offers an important insight on the paradox of mastery in any domain:

The tools that help you grow at the beginning are the tools you’ll need to scrap to achieve a higher end.

This reminds me of the Shu-Ha-Ri model for mastery:

Shu (to obey): Learn to operate according to the rules.
Ha (to break): Begin to challenge and adapt the rules.
Ri (to transcend): Create new rules.
The first stage (Shu) is about learning the existing conventions.

The second stage (Ha) is about beginning to challenge those existing conventions. You are still using the existing rules, but manipulating them on the edges.

The third stage (Ri) is about complete separation from the existing conventions. You are creating your own conventions beyond the frontier of what was previously understood or possible.

You climb the ladder—then you throw it away.

This model has clear applications to our lives:

In entrepreneurship: Common business frameworks help at the beginning, but innovation requires new ones be constructed.
In creating: Templates work up to a point, but real trust is only built through unique authenticity.
In careers: You have an early reliance on advice, but excellence requires you to lean into your differences.
In personal growth: External mantras provide the base, but growth comes from internal work that no one else can guide.
So, climb the ladder—but don’t cling to it. Because at some point, the only way up is off.

The ladder served its purpose. Now it’s time to fly.
HELLO WEF
I hope you doing well continuing with your daily activities also in my side I am continue well to today I want to share with you about the last stay of form six student in our school it was yesterday that all form six student who study in our school finished there last examination for Advanced Certificate for Secondary Education Examination (ACSEE) and they have joy because they dreamt to start the university the next year and prey for God more and more
%%%%%%%%%%%% HAVE A NICE MOMENT %%%%%%%%
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