2012年9月30日 星期日

How to go from Amateur to Professional


How to go from Amateur to Professional

http://okdork.com/2012/08/23/how-to-go-from-amateur-to-professional/

I spent the weekend with David Deida. What a tornado!



Category: Entrepreneurship

One of the things he said that really resonated was about how does someone internalize and get really fucking good at something.
He shared a story of how 999 out of 1000 of Michaelangelo or Van Gogh’s art pieces were thrown away.
The public only saw the 1% that was their best.
There are 3 levels for being like them.
1- Amateur – You try something out and give up or do it occasionally
2- Hobbyist – You do it regularly and maybe make money but you don’t do it consistently
3- Professional – You are doing the work even when you don’t feel like doing it.
This was something Mike Tyson said as well when I saw him in New York.
He showed some of the top boxers ever. EVER!
Tyson mentioned how all of them lost at least one fight. BOOM.
That really stuck with me. The point that everyone starts somewhere and it’s the perseverance and practice that will separate out the winners from the losers.
What do you want to be?




Sam http://www.hoopsfix.com/
August 24th, 2012
6:34 am

Made my day to see a new post from you in my RSS reader – I hope that you can start posting here again more frequently!

RV http://www.hoopsfix.com/
August 24th, 2012
7:26 am

Totally. Jordan said it best: http://youtu.be/GuXZFQKKF7A (I watch this video every few days just to remind me of the possibilities of human potential when you’re committed and never, ever give up).
("I've missed more than 9000 shots in my career. I've lost almost 300 games. 26 times, I've been trusted to take the game winning shot and missed. I've failed over and over and over again in my life. And that is why I succeed."
-- Michael Jordan)




Freeman LaFLeur http://freemanlafleur.com/
August 24th, 2012
7:29 am

I think the key here is definitely perseverance. We live in an age where anyone who is dedicated enough can become really good at almost anything but it takes a lot of perseverance. More than I think the majority of people are willing to put in.

Nice post Noah!

Noah
August 24th, 2012
8:00 am

Thanks Sam.
Been wanting to do this for awhile. Will aim with 1 post a week.

Noah
August 24th, 2012
8:01 am

Freeman!

So freaking true. Most people just give up or don’t hit the gym the moment they don’t feel like it. Separates the 99% vs the 1%. What do you think pushes you beyond that? A bigger purpose?

Noah
August 24th, 2012
8:01 am

@RV Great video!! thanks for sharing.

RV
August 24th, 2012
8:35 am

Actually found an even more on point video that absolutely nails the importance of perseverance and how inextricably linked it is to passion when it comes to success. Steve, take it away… http://youtu.be/gxo2rGr7Yfg

Tony Perea
August 24th, 2012
8:43 am

Welcome back Noah! I do agree with this, I believe that if you are a goal oriented person with strong enough will, eventually you can achieve anything you want. But, as you said, the truth is that most people quit. Maybe we just don’t have strong enough reasons to make it through the tough days, other times maybe we are probably just lazy or scared I think.

Riley Dallas http://chubbygrub.com/
August 24th, 2012
9:37 am

Great post…I have a huge respect for talent that is born from perseverance.
Assuming that all talent happens naturally is such an easy trap to fall into. I find myself doing it when trying to rationalize perceived gaps in success.

I watch a lot of Mixergy interviews, and my favorite one is from a kid who merely hustled (albeit in a very deliberate, “lean startup” way) with almost no technical skills.

http://mixergy.com/sam-ovens-snapinspect-interview/

Berta
August 24th, 2012
10:26 am

So glad you’re posting again! I had JUST subscribed and was anticipating frequent email delivery when the blog went quiet.

Look forward to more great posts!

Berta

Noah
August 24th, 2012
10:59 am

@riley It’s all in having a why to stick with to persist during the hardest times. Thanks for sharing that Mixergy interview.

@Berta. I went into hibernation, now I’m back weekly (to start). Definitely need to clean the site up.

Aaron Wulf http://aaronwulf.com/
August 25th, 2012
5:16 am

Nice to see this post from you, Noah.
There is much to be said about just surviving the initial ups and downs of tackling a new endeavor. It is apparent that winners don’t pack up and go home when things get tough.

You’ve got a ton of knowledge to share, and we’re all ears! Look forward to reading your next posts.
Take care, Aaron

Devin Reams http://devin.reams.me/
August 25th, 2012
7:23 am

Welcome back to OKDork!

I think the Apple v Samsung lawsuit has shown this, too. Device makers have put I’m a lot of time, money, prototypes, etc. and all we see is the very best. That’s not to say bad ideas were never made or designed… Persistence (not “settling”) pays off.

Indika http://www.indikadefonseka.com/
August 27th, 2012
6:02 am

Noah! It’s great that you’re back! I had only just discovered your blog when I learned that you hadn’t been updating it. That put me off checking this out properly, but then today I thought I’d just get to your blog and read the stuff you’d put up ages ago and voila! You’re back! Keep it up!

I turned 39 recently and decided that I really wanted to shake things up and reinvent myself. I had let fear of failure and other things like that act as barrier to creating the kind of life I wanted for myself, but no more! So I started hustling… 3 solid weeks already and it keeps getting better. Turns out that dogged determination to do my best and keep going no matter how epic the failures would be, is all I needed to overcome fear and inertia.

Keep posting Noah, you’ve got a community here that wants to hang out with you.

Best regards to you all!

Indika
August 27th, 2012
6:13 am

Sorry! Meant to share this link but forgot.

Here it is:

http://joelrunyon.com/two3/how-bad-do-you-want-it

Its a page from Joel Runyon’s ‘blog of impossible things’
 Check out the videos of Giavani Ruffin working out (and the soundtrack) – pretty inspirational!

Noah
August 27th, 2012
5:13 pm

Welcome home.

Nate Shivar http://www.nateshivar.com/
August 27th, 2012
6:01 pm

I like the 3 divisions – and that quote about Michelangelo. Whenever I go and see a really good band – I think about how many thousands of hours and thousands of shows they’ve done to get to where they are at – when no one was cheering and they really didn’t want to play that one song one more time.

As a trivial aside, OkDork and NevBlog were both highlighted in Google Reader. I clicked OkDork first.

Insiya Hussain
September 7th, 2012
6:28 am

Hey Noah, great to see you writing more. Loved this piece – just the thing I needed to get out of my headspace and get going in the morning. Thanks.

Say something witty

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