One key point I took away was to sit down and write your goal. Having it down on paper solidifies what’s in your head. Another point which I agree with is to just do it! And I can relate to researching a topic a lot and getting fatigued but I’d say research is good, just not too much before you actually start working on your goal 😉Awesome wisdom again Simo thanks for the advice!
The learning curve is a unimodal curve. On the y-axis is the work. On the x-axis is time. The more you work, the more experience you gain. Hence, I think that research is divided into 2 parts: Introductory/ fundamental research which is an undisputed part essential to learning. And growth research which needs to be coupled with application.
The problem is most people do too much theory, getting a lot of information they don't need and ultimately burning out. The curve becomes an inverted parabola where in the beginning you do learn but as time progresses limiting factors appear like mental fatigue, comparison, overthinking... leading to stagnation or even loss of information.
I might talk about this more concisely in a future post soon.
One key point I took away was to sit down and write your goal. Having it down on paper solidifies what’s in your head. Another point which I agree with is to just do it! And I can relate to researching a topic a lot and getting fatigued but I’d say research is good, just not too much before you actually start working on your goal 😉Awesome wisdom again Simo thanks for the advice!
Appreciate your commitment.
The learning curve is a unimodal curve. On the y-axis is the work. On the x-axis is time. The more you work, the more experience you gain. Hence, I think that research is divided into 2 parts: Introductory/ fundamental research which is an undisputed part essential to learning. And growth research which needs to be coupled with application.
The problem is most people do too much theory, getting a lot of information they don't need and ultimately burning out. The curve becomes an inverted parabola where in the beginning you do learn but as time progresses limiting factors appear like mental fatigue, comparison, overthinking... leading to stagnation or even loss of information.
I might talk about this more concisely in a future post soon.
Can’t wait!