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12/ Interestingly, the vocab point often becomes the end goal for some of my skills. Take Judo, for instance. I've long made peace with the fact that I cannot reach mastery. (I'm in a race against my declining physical ability). But I think I can get to the vocab point.
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13/ I want to be able to watch Olympic level Judo and really understand the chess game that occurs before a throw or pin happens. And I think I can get there with a decent amount of hard work. (Mastery, on the other hand, would likely require a decade or so of 100% focus).
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15/ Another implication: when someone uses cliched language / well-known categories to describe their skill, you can probably guess that they haven't reached the vocab point yet.
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16/ This can lead to some surprising things! For instance, I recently read a breakdown of Paul Graham's writing style. I could tell, within the first three paragraphs, that it was written by a novice. They totally missed what was hard about pg's writing.
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17/ They were leaking information about their own skill level, without knowing it. I think about this a lot whenever I write about business or about org design. I wonder if I'm leaking information about my (lack of) skill.
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18/ Another implication of the vocab point: you should get to the vocab point of at least one skill, because then you learn to recognise it in others. Preferably when you're younger (i.e. if you have kids, it's good to get them to the vocab point of at least one skill).
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19/ By this I mean: if you know the vocab point exists, you'll also know what it feels like to have arrived at it. This means that you'll know what to look for when climbing other skill trees.
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I like this, but I have a problem with the idea that it is a point you arrive at. It makes it a lot easier to describe, of course. It's like the middle of a logistic curve, where learning builds on itself, but short of the really hard work toward deep expertise.
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Replying to and
An important part that some miss, is that when you get into that region, you should recognize that you have not arrived or even almost arrived at expertise. You should be able to see what experts have that you don't.
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From a speaking coach who helps people fix disinfluencies (umm, likes etc) 4 levels of progression from clueless to master: Unconscious incompetence Conscious incompetence Conscious competence Unconscious competence
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