The First Project of Ender Beings

In the End, your first completed complex project is a time of great celebration, no matter the age. A complex project is a project that takes extensive time to plan, develop, and execute, no matter if it has been completed before by others. By challenging oneself to create in a way that enables growth and learning, there is no better signal that they are ready to step into the more developed and respected circles.   When a project is announced to one's community, there is a small celebration that takes the form of sharing others' first project in an effort to provide inspiration and information on hurdles they could overcome sooner than those before them. There is not much in way of material celebration as there is not always enough to frivolously use, so sharing experiences and expertise is a much more widespread method of celebration.   As the project is underway, the community doesn't initiate aid even if they can and would offer it. It is up to the researcher to learn to find those that would aid and to ask for it themselves. After the project is completed, all those that were interested in helping would approach the researcher and express their congratulations, their willingness to help, and their feedback if asked. This serves as an example of how much support there is even if you don't see it, and how much potential there is in simply asking.   While the project is underway, the researcher picks a few trusted and respected mentors to ask for more consistent aid in how to best present their project. These individuals act as a sounding board for the researcher and is a very honored position to be given.   After the project is completed, there is a celebration in the wider community and the smaller community, regardless of whether or not the project completed what it intended to successfully.   In the wider community, there is a recognition of the researcher and their first project is kept in a specific section of the library: The Collection of Firsts.   In the smaller community, those the researcher chose to aid in the project and those who supported them through the project swap stories once more, all reflecting on the current project and how it helped them or hindered them. What can they all learn from it? What can they learn from it individually? All of this is contemplated, shared, and celebrated.
Primary Related Location
Related Organizations
Related Ethnicities

Comments

Please Login in order to comment!