💪 How to get great.


You’ve probably heard of “The 10,000-hour rule”. Malcolm Gladwell popularized it in Outliers— in which he posits that it takes that long to become expert at any skill. Gladwell’s distillation of the science behind “rule” has been debunked since then.

Not surprising — our own experience confirms there’s more to the story.

Think about driving.

You’ve probably been doing it for decades. If you commute for an hour, you’ll drive 10,000 hours in twenty years. So, are you an expert driver? Really? Could you win a NASCAR race? Do stunts in an action movie?

Another example. Make dinner for your family every night, and you’ll eventually achieve 10,000 hours of cooking. So, would that make you an expert cook? Could you open a restaurant, write a cookbook, win some Michelin stars?

If you sing in the shower each day, will you eventually be ready to win The Voice?

No. Because in each of these cases, you improve only until you are adequate. Then, your improvement tapers off. You don’t keep getting better and better over all 10,000 hours.

You may only keep improving until you pass your road test at 16 and stay at that same level for the rest of your driving life. You may still only cook at the same level as you did when you had your first apartment. Your singing, I hate to tell you, is still not ready to come out of the shower.

But why?

With each new skill, we begin with intensity and continued learning, but then the process becomes automatic. We lock into a way of doing things and stay at that level. If you keep practicing what you already know, same chords, same song, same recipe, you just know what you already know. The skill becomes automatic but doesn’t progress to become expert.

You need to stretch.

Becoming an expert is a long journey of small upward steps. Each small goal met, each small skill mastered moves you to the next level. As you practice your skill, it’s not enough to log the hours — you need to be purposeful. Your work requires a clear goal. And it needs feedback.

If you keep drawing in the same way, drawing the same thing, using the same tools, you won’t keep getting better. You need to push yourself, study great artists, set yourself escalating challenges, take more workshops, expand your repertoire.

Your brain is like any muscle. It needs to be challenged to keep growing. It requires fresh learning. In fact, lifelong learning of a particular kind.

You don’t need to be a brain surgeon to see why this works, but here’s a little science.

Each day, we produce 1,500 or so fresh brain cells. These new cells move to the areas where there is the most activity. And learning causes lots of brain activity and attracts these new cells to help out with the heavy lifting.

As you learn, you are actually changing the physical structure of your brain and developing a tendency to improve in certain skills — the ones you practice and learn. The more you learn, the more your brain develops, and the more you are good at these skills. Stop learning, and those cells atrophy, and your skills level off.

So, draw every day, absolutely. Log in those 10,000 hours. But keep learning, experimenting, studying, setting goals, getting feedback, and pushing yourself to keep improving.

Expertise is a great goal, and it’s one you can achieve, no matter your ‘talent,’ your background, or your age. Just make sure you commit to A) working hard and B) reaching higher.

Your pal,

Danny


P.S. Speaking of reaching higher, I am dead-chuffed because SO many people subscribed to the newly-received Studio Notebook, this week. If you missed the chance to use the discount code STUDIO50, sign up here and try your first month at a 50% discount (just $3.50 and probably worth it).

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Danny Gregory: I help you make art again

Each Friday, I send advice, ideas, stories and tips to 25K creative people like you. Author of 13 best-selling books on creativity. Founder of Sketchbook Skool w 50k+ students

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