Every student dreams of becoming stronger.
They want higher ratings, better results, trophies, certificates, recognition, and success. Yet many students fail to appreciate the single factor that accelerates all of these goals:
A good coach.
Ironically, the better the coach is, the easier it becomes for students to underestimate the coach's contribution.
Why Students Underestimate Coaches
When a coach teaches an opening, the student remembers the opening.
When a coach fixes a bad habit, the student only sees the improvement.
When a coach prevents a blunder, the student never sees the disaster that was avoided.
The coach's work is often invisible.
Students notice the move they played. They don't notice the hundreds of hours of study, preparation, experience, mistakes, and lessons that allowed the coach to guide them toward that move.
As a result, many students begin to believe:
"I improved because I practiced."
"I won because I worked hard."
"I solved the puzzle myself."
While hard work is essential, the uncomfortable truth is that hard work without direction often leads to slow progress.
A coach provides direction.
The Difference Between Information and Guidance
Today, information is everywhere.
Thousands of YouTube videos. Millions of online games. Unlimited puzzles. Endless databases.
Yet most players remain stuck.
Why?
Because information is not the same as guidance.
A student can watch 100 videos and still not know what to work on next.
A coach identifies weaknesses, prioritizes improvements, creates a path, and saves years of trial and error.
The coach doesn't simply provide answers.
The coach helps students ask the right questions.
The Shortcut Nobody Appreciates
Imagine walking through a forest.
One person wanders randomly.
Another person follows someone who has already walked the path hundreds of times.
Who reaches the destination faster?
This is what coaching does.
A coach has already made many of the mistakes the student is about to make.
The coach has already seen common patterns.
The coach knows which skills matter and which distractions should be ignored.
Students often see only the lesson fee.
They rarely calculate the years of experience they are gaining access to.
Success Creates a Dangerous Illusion
One of the strangest things happens when students improve.
As they become stronger, they sometimes begin believing they no longer need guidance.
The very success that coaching helped create can make students forget where that success came from.
A student gains confidence and starts thinking:
"I can do this on my own now."
Sometimes they can.
Most often, progress slows dramatically.
Even world champions have coaches.
Even elite athletes have coaches.
Even top business leaders have mentors.
The higher the level, the more valuable expert guidance becomes.
What Great Coaches Really Teach
A great coach teaches much more than technique.
They teach discipline.
They teach patience.
They teach how to think.
They teach how to learn.
They teach how to recover from failure.
Most importantly, they help students avoid wasting years repeating the same mistakes.
Gratitude Accelerates Growth
The students who improve the fastest are often not the most talented.
They are the most coachable.
They listen.
They ask questions.
They trust the process.
They understand that every correction is an opportunity, not criticism.
When students appreciate their coach, they become more receptive to learning.
And when learning improves, results follow naturally.
Final Thoughts
Talent can take a student part of the way.
Hard work can take them further.
But a good coach can multiply the value of both.
Many students only realize the true value of a coach years later, after they have experienced the cost of learning everything the hard way.
The strongest students are not those who know everything.
They are those who recognize and value the people who help them become better than they could have become alone.
A coach is not an expense.
A coach is an investment in faster growth, fewer mistakes, and a much clearer path toward success.
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