Snippets from my morning read:

Even among the most ambitious individuals, learning plans are rare. Most people are reactive. They don’t plan. Like surfers in a violent ocean, they surrender to their environment.
They direct their attention towards the never-ending shouts of email newsletters, friend recommendations, and social media feeds.

We can do better.

What Should You Do?

Learn in three-month sprints and commit to a new learning project every quarter.
Even the longest projects are simply a collection of short term tasks. Knowing that, you should break down the project into daily increments, and create a series of daily and weekly goals to learn the skills required to complete the project on time.
The end goal should be clear. Start by writing down a positive vision of your future. Focus on the end goal, not the skill itself. For example, instead of “I want to learn how to draw,” decide: “moving forward, all the charts, graphs, and images on my site will be hand-drawn.”
Everybody loves novelty. Even if your learning plan is bounded by a strict goal, the details should be flexible. The activities should be cohesive enough to keep on track, but diverse enough to stay interesting.
For example, if you want to learn about the Space Race between America & the Soviet Union, you can read books, watch documentaries, listen to podcasts with astronauts, and explore newspaper articles from the time-period. Choose what excites you, as long as it serves the end goal.
Share your learnings. Publish an essay, a book review, an art project, or open source your code. Sharing your ideas will help you digest them, and if your posts are interesting, you may attract experts in your field of curiosity.
Sharing your work is like inviting friends to your home. It forces you to be clean and double check everything, which accelerates the learning process.

Full article by David Perrell @david_perell

perell.com/blog/learn-lik…

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More from @solomonking

20 Oct
Snippets from my morning read:

Allow yourself the uncomfortable luxury of changing your mind. We live in a culture where one of the greatest social disgraces is not having an opinion, so we often form our “opinions” based on superficial impressions or borrowed ideas of others.
Do nothing for prestige or status or money or approval alone. As Paul Graham observed, “prestige is like a powerful magnet that warps even your beliefs about what you enjoy. It causes you to work not on what you like, but what you’d like to like.”
Be generous. Be generous with your time and your resources and with giving credit and, especially, with your words. It’s so much easier to be a critic than a celebrator. Always remember there is a human being on the other end of every exchange.
Read 8 tweets
19 Oct
Snippets from today's morning read. "A Few Rules"

The person who tells the most compelling story wins. Not the best idea. Just the story that catches people’s attention and gets them to nod their heads.
Something can be factually true but contextually nonsense. Bad ideas often have at least some seed of truth that gives their followers confidence.
Behavior is hard to fix. When people say they’ve learned their lesson they underestimate how much of their previous mistake was caused by emotions that will return when faced with the same circumstances.
Read 8 tweets
18 Oct
If there's anything that "Grit" is teaching me, it's that my practice has been sub-par and unsatisfactory both in intensity and deliberateness.

It echoes a concern I recently mentioned to @joelanthony23: I believe I'm severely underperforming and not truly committed to learning.
What's increasingly standing out for me is that my goals are not as wild as I initially assumed, but pretty achievable in the grand scheme (and timeline) of things.

So what I'm lacking is the intentionality of deliberate practice, alongside a dedicated learning plan.
This summary from "Grit" lays it out clearly.

The basic requirements of deliberate practice:

1. A clearly defined stretch goal.
2. Full concentration and effort.
3. Immediate and informative feedback.
4. Repetition with reflection and refinement.
Read 4 tweets
16 Sep
Hi.

You. Yes, you.

I know it's tough, I know you feel like you can't go another day, but - and trust me on this - it will get better.

It may feel like the world is collapsing around you, and it may actually be collapsing around you, but just hang in there. One more step.
We live in a world that is unpredictable, unfair and relentlessly brutal. A world that sucks in so many ways. And this year feels like it's hands-down the absolute worst.

But it's also a world full of hope, wonder and a dazzling beauty that will blow your mind each day.
The sun still rises with the promise of a new blessing, and the moon ethereally glows with the promise of a guiding light in the midst of the darkness.

Let this thought guide you, always, towards hope. Let this certainty renew you each long day and each longer night.
Read 7 tweets
8 Jun
A few thoughts on why, even though "all lives matter" is a valid statement, we should be mindful and empathetic and not use it to hijack #BlackLivesMatter, which is a movement literally begging for people to pay attention to the social inequalities facing black people.
I want to use a practical, very specific example that may help provide better context outside the seemingly controversial race issue.

I started @FundiBots in 2010, using robotics as a fun and practical way for Ugandan students to experience the magic of science.
As the years went on, our team and regional reach expanded and the number of students we trained grew exponentially (10,000+ to date).

But something started to show in our data: we had far fewer girls in our robotics classes than boys. For every 10 boys, we had about 3 girls.
Read 22 tweets
5 Jun
I'm very dark-skinned, even by Ugandan standards and I travel a lot, but the only place I ever feel safe is when I'm in Africa. I love Emirates, but every single transit through Dubai is a nightmare of resolutely ignoring stares, hushed whispers and pointing, sneering adults.
It doesn't help that I'm tall, so I stand out like a sore thumb in almost all crowds. I always joke with friends that if we ever get lost in a huge crowd, all they have to do is look for me.

I am, in very, very many ways, hard to ignore. Especially because I'm very dark-skinned.
Every trip comes with the mental preparation for the fact that I will be judged first by of the color of my skin.

Not by the decades of experience. Not by the skills I have acquired. And not by the impact of our work.

But judged by the one thing I have no control over: My skin.
Read 18 tweets

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