Is it because you are interested in doing things well, or because you are doing well, you have always been interested in doing them? These two people are really a bit like chickens and eggs.
We usually understand that if you are not interested in something, it is often painful to force yourself to do it. For example, you don't like mathematics, but because it is a big industry, it is the main branch, especially the college entrance examination. Usually, math scores determine the final ranking, so you must study hard, work hard and work hard. Poor test scores, strong sense of frustration, and little interest in mathematics. However, for the sake of my future, I still have to open the paper full of red cross and start painful correction. Life is not so beautiful, not interested in it, but persistent. The makers of mathematical rules are all professional disciplines, which is very inhuman to people who don't like mathematics.
On the other hand, what we do well is usually what they are interested in. For example, when you were a child, you learned to swim. You have always liked swimming. You won a few games and your novice mahjong, so you often like to find someone to play mahjong or something. Because you do well in a field, you will always pay attention to it, learn it, practice it, and then play better and better, forming a virtuous circle.
The core of the problem now is, how did the interest come from?
We are exposed to a new skill for the first time, such as learning to swim. It may be active, it may be the strength of parents, or it may be a coincidence. In a word, will we be unbiased on this issue, and will we have strong feelings like most people (we say "love at first sight")?
We will give it a try. Go into the water at least a few times. You may be surrounded by family, friends or teachers. You start to feel water, and you start to feel buoyancy. During this time, I accidentally choked a few mouthfuls, even in the water under the sink.