Read the following passage and answer question,
Poor self-images of the worst kind are created, or enlarged, when teachers, people in authority or even the general public come in contact with the underprivileged members of the society in a manner that produces inferiority feeling in them. It does not take much imagination to know that the stereotype portrayed would lead to a feeling of inferiority. Another cause of a poor self-image is the tendency to confuse failure in a project with a failure in life. A child who fails a subject in school or who does not make the team, makes the mistake of identifying a single failure with failure in life itself. This is tragically reinforced many times by teachers and /or parents. Once the poor self-image slide starts, the natural tendency is to feed the inferiority feeling. Many people do this when they castigate themselves because they can't remember everything they hear and everybody they meet, which brings us to the cause of an untrained memory. For the moment, there are two warming thoughts which will give you a lot of comfort. First, a perfect memory does not indicate a great mind any more than a huge dictionary, with all the words in it, represents a great piece of literature. Second, the person who cannot remember is infinitely better off than the one who can't forget. These two thoughts are temporarily comforting, but do not hang your hat on them. Actually there is no such thing as a 'good' memory or a 'bad' memory. It is either trained or untrained. The choice of whether you train it or leave it untrained is up to you. One more cause of a self-image is an unrealistic and unfair comparison of experiences. We exaggerate others' successful experience and downgrade our own success. Experience has nothing to do with ability.