"To do easily what is difficult for others is the mark of talent. To do what is impossible for talent is the mark of genius." - Henri-Frédéric Amiel
This quote suggests our talents lie in what is hard work for most and merely play for us. It goes into that sense of automated flow where your mind does complex thinking with serious accuracy - and yet feels no strain in the vast curiosity to continue.
Perhaps it even explains the phenomenon behind those who practice rare and extremely difficult tasks to eventually find them easier as they adapt.
People are certainly born with talents, but what spurs the extraordinary motivation to develop talents we aren't born with? Maybe these concepts are one of the same - and it's the high curiosity towards certain things that almost coerces us to develop these talents.
Then to go beyond talent - perhaps by surprise - can definitely leave the world with a genius new piece of information. Something that breaks the conventional pattern of talent.
Often the history behind genius ideas reveals them occurring in spontaneous eureka moments when everything falls into place. A bit of mental flow beyond the conventional train of thought when you least suspect it.
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