How to Learn Life Skills

Life skills are an important aspect of personal development. They are the vital tools that enable any person to reach their maximum potential and achieve satisfaction in all areas of life. Various thinkers have classified and categorized life skills according to different paradigms and theories of personality. The website ManifestYourPotential.com, for example, breaks down life skills into the following categories: self knowledge, communication, living, relationship, work, time and money management, and problem solving. As life skills take time to master, begin by familiarizing yourself with the basic concepts of each category.

Things You'll Need

  • Computer with Internet access
  • Notebook
  • Life skills worksheets
  • Pen or pencil
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Instructions

  1. Discover the Skills

    • 1

      Begin learning the life skill of self-knowledge with a personal inventory. Make a list of your individual strengths, weaknesses, goals, needs and values. This promotes self awareness and an understanding of where you are, where you want to be and any limitations or obstacles that can impede your journey.

    • 2

      Learn the life skills of communication and relationship. This involves learning how to state your feelings in a healthy way, compromise, and handle disagreements that take place. Think about your verbal and nonverbal exchanges. Assess how you express your feelings and views. Listen to others when they share. Pay attention to how you respond. Examine the exchanges you've had with various people (friends, coworkers and strangers) and see if any patterns arise. Along these lines, write down the names of people you have a healthy relationship with and explore how you're able to communicate with that person so effectively.

    • 3

      Learn problem-solving life skills by tackling dilemmas in a methodical manner. Examine the source of the problem, explore and evaluate possible resolutions, settle on a solution and rectify the situation. The ability to think critically plays an important part in problem solving, as a person must be able to to grasp, explore, evaluate and employ information in a real-life context, not just in a scholarly or abstract way.

      A number of problem-solving methods are available for making the process easier. For general approaches to problem solving, MindTools, a website devoted to personal skill-building for career development, recommends using cause-and-effect diagrams, affinity diagrams and risk analysis. MindTools also offers more specialized techniques for business-related problem solving.

    • 4

      Divide the work skills into two components, large-scale and small-scale, following the advice on ManifestYourPotential.com. The large-scale work life skills include knowing how the business world works as defined by the worldwide labor market, global economics, industry dynamics, company structures, hiring practices and career paths. Small-scale work life skills include personal traits like your work ethic, efficiency, team player skill and your ability to earn enough money to support your lifestyle.

    • 5

      Improve your with money-management life skills by examining how you save, budget, handle and spend money. Evaluate your habits to see if you're managing your finances in a way that's good for now and responsible for the future.

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