4. In How to Read a Book, Mortimer Adler expounds on the virtues of Active Reading.
To read actively, rather than passively, is to engage w/ the writing.
To ask questions & to seek answers.
To go from a state of understanding less to understanding more on your own effort.
Ultimately, Active Reading is about forming an enlightened opinion based on an understanding of the author’s point, not just what is said but why she says it.
It’s the difference between reading for information and #reading for understanding.
In Ego is the Enemy, @RyanHoliday explains that when your work itself fills you with pride & self-respect, then a sense of accomplishment & recognition from others doesn’t matter.
“The less attached we are to outcomes the better.”
9. Free yourself from analysis paralysis by acting quickly when you’re in a Freeroll scenario.
@AnnieDuke, in How to Decide, explains that a Freeroll is any decision where the potential upside for acting quickly greatly outweighs any downside to getting it wrong.
Recognize decisions where more time doesn’t improve the outcome.
Identify Freerolls by asking yourself, “what’s the worst that could happen” if you repeated your decision over and over.
Also, ask if you will be worse off if you’re wrong.
In On Writing: A Memoir of the Craft, @StephenKing breaks down the secret to #writing good fiction.
His advice is straightforward w/o a hint of bullshit.
You need to: read, write, and use the right tools. And above all else, you must be fearless. #books
1/17
King emphasizes the importance of learning through doing. Not only through writing but reading too.
"If you want to be a writer, you must do two things above all others: read a lot and write a lot. There's no way around these two things that I'm aware of, no shortcut."
2
King teaches the reader many practical lessons, including advice about the following key areas every writer should focus on:
• TOOLS
• DISCOVERY
• HONESTY
• PRACTICE
• SYSTEM
• TIPS
• REVISION
Getting started in web3 or crypto can be challenging due to an overall lack of an onboarding process and a steep learning curve. But once you get through that it starts to make sense.
Following is a 🧵that I wish had been available when I started down the 🐇🕳️.
1/
I hope others will find it useful.
First, what are the basics about “crypto”? Crypto is short for cryptography, but how’s that apply to web3?