Expert

Kathy Sierra’s post on How to be an expert simply reinforces the old advice:Practice!

Yet the research says that if we were willing to put in more hours,and to use those hours to practice the things that aren’t so fun,we could become good. Great. Potentially brilliant. We need,as Restak refers to it,“a rage to master.”That dedication to mastery drives the potential expert to focus on the most subtle aspects of performance,and to never be satisfied. There is always more to improve on,and they’re willing to work on the less fun stuff.

And in this day and age,we have become so utterly obsessed with doing everything that we are not experts anymore:we coast around trying to do things as best as we can.

And that is why only a few obsessive and determined individuals actually made it.

1 comment to Expert

  • How Desire Trumps Talent Across the Boards

    Desire and dedication trumps talent. The person who winds up excelling is generally the one who wants to get better,not the one with the natural gifts for writing,science,bowling,drawing –or whatever. There is an insightful piece at Creating Passi…

Leave a Reply

  

  

  

You can use these HTML tags

<a href=""title=""><abbr title=""><acronym title=""><b><blockquote cite=""><cite><code><del datetime=""><em><i><q cite=""><strike><strong>