A few lessons:
I think @wycats was exactly right in a 2011 interview when he said that (paraphrasing) *not* diving in headfirst is an underrated way to learn Vim. You can just ease into it, learning one thing after another, without paying huge upfront productivity costs. [5/N]
(iii) back to the last occurrence of "Jefferson," (iv) back to the last instance of whatever word is under your cursor right now, (v) back to the last blank line, or (iv) [any other reasonable thing you can think of? Many people use (ii) (CTRL+left in various apps). [5/N}
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You will not be surprised to learn that all of these, and many more, are out-of-the-box, one- or two-keystroke commands in Vim (and other such text editors). (OK, (iii) is two keystrokes plus the text you're searching for.) [6/N]
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You already knew that "power user" text editors exist. But perhaps it helps to think of them as tools for taking all the ways that Word gently breaks you out of the metaphysics of pen and paper (e.g., what's close to what?), and going to eleven. [7/N]
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