LOS ANGELES — The one thing 14-year-old Moshe Kai Cavalin dislikes is being called a genius.
All he did, after all, was enroll in college at age 8 and earn his
first of two Associate of Arts degrees from East Los Angeles Community
College in 2009 at age 11, graduating with a perfect 4.0 grade point
average.
Now, at 14, he's poised to graduate from UCLA this year.
He's also just published an English edition of his first book, "We Can
Do."
The 100-page guideline explains how other young people can accomplish
what Cavalin did through such simple acts as keeping themselves focused
and approaching everything with total commitment. He's hoping it will
show people there's no genius involved, just hard work.
"That's always the question that bothers me," Cavalin, who turned 14
on Valentine's Day, says when the G-word is raised. "People need to know
you don't really need to be a genius. You just have to work hard and
you can accomplish anything."
And maybe cut out some of the TV.
Although he's a big fan of Jackie Chan movies, Cavalin says he limits his television time to four hours a week.
Not that he lacks for recreational activities or feels that his
parents pressured him into studying constantly. He writes in "We Can Do"
of learning to scuba dive, and he loves soccer and martial arts.
He
used to participate in the latter sport when he was younger, winning
trophies for his age group, until his UCLA studies and his writing made
things a little too hectic.
Indeed one of the key messages of his book is to stay focused and to not take on any endeavor half-heartedly.
"I was able to reach the stars, but others can reach the `Milky Way," he tells readers.
It was a professor at his first institution of higher learning, East
Los Angeles City College, who inspired him, Cavalin says. He didn't like
the subject but managed to get an A in it anyway, by applying himself
and seeing how enthusiastic his teacher, Richard Avila, was about the
subject.
Avila, he says, inspired him to write a book explaining his methods for success so he could motivate others.
It took four years to finish, in part because Cavalin, whose mother
is Chinese, decided to publish it in Chinese, and doing the translation
himself was laborious.
Han Shian Culture Publishing of Taiwan put the book in print, and it
did well in Taiwan, Singapore and Malaysia, as well in several
bookstores in Southern California's Asian communities. He then brought
it out in English for the U.S. market.
Because of his heavy study load, Cavalin has had little opportunity
to promote the book, other than a signing at UCLA, where he also lives
in student housing with his parents and attends the school on a
scholarship.
After earning his bachelor's degree, the math major plans to enroll
in graduate school with hopes of eventually earning a doctorate.
After that, he's not so sure. He points out that he's still just barely a teenager.
"Who knows?" he says, chuckling at the thought of what lies ahead in
adulthood. "That's a very distant future, and I'm pretty much planning
for just the next few years. That's too far into the future for me to
see."
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