Most of the time you are growing up, people tell you what’s wrong with you. Your coach tells you, your parents tell you, the teachers tell you when they grade you. I think that that’s good in the early stages, because it helps you then develop skills. But at some point in your career, generally I think when you are in your teens, you look in a mirror and you have to say, despite all the bumps and warts, “I like that person I’m looking at, and let’s just do our best.” It’s that point, where you start to take what’s good about you and polish it like an apple.