Letter #32 from a Learn-it-all
October review, Shipping it, effective education, the origin of a hack, missed opportunity, intentional learning
Hello fellow learner,
Greetings from Chicago!
Happy Halloween, happy November, and not so happy end to daylights savings time.
This weekend I went on a long stroll outside. The sun was out, so I was too. It was great to be out and about. I miss coming downtown and cannot say I do it often. It makes me realize that I wish I took more advantage of it while I worked my last job in the tallest building (Willis Tower) last year. I took the purple L line train 20 minutes each day into the city.
Here's a snapshot of everything in store for this issue:
A reflection of October and what I loved, lacked and learned
Highlights of my Ship It posts
Perfectionism, effective learning, and tension from Seth Godin
The definition and origin of a Hack
Wise words from the inventor of the first-ever practical, and affordable home illuminator
A question to get you thinking for the month of November
A silly Halloween picture
Now, let’s dive into letter 32 from a learn-it-all. Enjoy!
Some things I’ve learned through…
🎃 Reflecting
Over the weekend, I did a review of the past month that flew by. It was extremely helpful to stop and pause. It's super simple and I highly recommend giving it a shot to recognize patterns in the actions that you take.
To follow the format of every 4th letter (like letters 28, 23, and 19). Some highlights include:
What I loved:
Staying hydrated with my new HydroFlask. I drank about 3 liters of water each day.
Finally publishing my blog on discovering dyslexia.
Starting different engagements to work with the ambitious folks at both Astutely Media and Vitalize Talent.
Starting in the first cohort of the Performative Speaking course. My classmates constantly challenge me to be a better communicator.
Continuing to talk about pathfinding in this young professionals program led by BW Missions. The community is beyond supportive.
Sharing this newsletter and welcoming 19 new subscribers this month!
What I lacked:
Physical activity since rolling my ankle (again and again). I miss running.
Motivation to write daily. The daily ship it's are becoming laborious like a chore. I might start to turn to poetry. Stay tuned.
Boundaries with my sleep routine. I love the peace of the morning while I also love my flow of ideas at night. These both add up to not enough Z’s to catch. I've found naps to help though I still would rather be asleep earlier. From my poll, the sweet spot is somewhere between 20 and 30 minutes.
What I learned:
I need to incorporate daily fresh air. It's hard to stay sane staying inside too long. I think it is the medicine to ridding my migraines.
I completed Nat Eliason's Effortless Output course on learning Roam Research. I know how to use the tool better now, but I still have so much more to figure out.
My preferred working style. Being on remote teams, I have been putting together a personal operating manual that you can expect to see next week.
How much my core values have shifted. They used to be humor, spontaneity, excitement, honesty, and relationships. Now I would describe them as authenticity, playful, creativity, exploration, curiosity, and growth
That I have a lot of stories to share that can be speeches. They need to intentionally be outlined to take form for presentation.
🚢 Shipping It
I reinforced my daily writing habit and shared five Ship Its. Each of the pieces is less than 400 words. I explained my rationale behind starting it here.
This week my favorite pieces were:
Seeking Discomfort - I have found that when I seek discomfort and challenge, I am less surprised by change. Life feels less uncertain while the exposure to it is constant. Those who fear change, end up being on defense. Choose to be on offense instead.
Confusion before Clarity - A simplified cycle I have found of learning is Competence —> Confusion —> Clarity. The outcome of some clarity will inevitably lead to the beginning of the cycle again. It creates competence that converges into more confusion.
Reverse Engineer Success - While knowing the desired outcome, reverse engineering a strategy becomes simple. It gives you the answer of what to focus on. Perform well on tests. Show up as your best at swim meets. The unknown factor is whether the process you use will equate to your desired outcome.
🎧 Listening
I listened to Tim Ferriss interview entrepreneur, educator, and writer Seth Godin on The Game of Life, The Value of Hacks, and Overcoming Anxiety. Below I share my favorite nuggets of knowledge.
On the problem with pedagogy and teaching because people do not easily pick up dense information:
We learn things by becoming momentarily incompetent. We used to feel like we were in control, that we understood things and then all of a sudden, a new fact arises that counters what we know. In that moment, we’re feeling incompetent and that’s when most people quit. But then we get through it, and now we know something more than we used to know... Pacing that process is tricky.
On creating mystery and tension for effective learning:
The challenge is not to dumb it down, but to figure out what are the useful chunks of tension that you can create where someone can feel the tension, get through the tension, absorb it, and then be ready for another bit. Media challenges us because every once in a while, something breaks through that’s super dense, and like I wish I could write something that dense... It’s hard to get to where people will sit with you for that long.
On learning in his altMBA program and using tension:
The persistence of the cohort that you end up with is this increase in safety and enrollment, which are the two core elements of learning, that it will enable you to deal with ever more tension, which leads to more incompetence, which leads to the revelation.
Quality defines to mean meeting spec. There is a myth of quality and how it is another term for perfectionism:
Quality, if you want to be a perfectionist, is a great way to hide because you don’t want to be an enemy of quality. When someone says well I can’t ship this yet because the quality isn’t there, when someone says: Why are you racing through that? Don’t you want to put quality into it? We’re defenseless in the face of that.
🔎 Word to define
Hack: a professional who doesn’t care. (Seth Godin)
The hack has been beaten up enough times that he has emotionally disconnected. The hack has a short-term view, able to do what the client asks, without regard for how it will impact the culture or his long-term prospects. Serviceable is for hacks. Memorable and remarkable belong to professionals and hard-working amateurs.
Origin of a hack:
On the outskirts of London was a borough called Hackney. It was a place where they would raise horses. They didn’t raise thoroughbreds or extraordinary show horses. They raised just average horses at an average price.
If you got a Hackney horse, you probably did it because you were a hansom cab driver. That’s where your nickname came as being a hack. There’s nothing wrong with raising a hack. There’s nothing wrong with buying a hack. Being a hack is about giving the customer exactly what they want at a decent price.
Now a hack has been stigmatized to be a less than decent deed. It means either exploitation or a kick in the shins. Ouch. Apparently, shin-kicking is a popular sport in the South of England.
🌟 Quote to inspire
"Opportunity is missed by most people because it is dressed in overalls and looks like work." - Thomas Edison
💭 Question(s) to ponder
What can you intentionally seek out to learn this month? What is the smallest thing you can do to achieve this? How can you make this happen?
I appreciate you reading this! If certain ideas resonated or you have feedback to improve my future newsletters, I’d love you to leave a comment, reply to this email, or send me a message on Twitter @JenVermet.
Never stop learning 😁
Until next week,
Jen
P.S. enjoy this picture when I hung out at King library as a first-year in college at 3AM in my favorite Halloween footie pajamas. Life has changed a bit over the years.
If you’re reading this because someone shared this newsletter with you or you clicked a link somewhere, welcome! I’d love it if you subscribed below to receive future updates: