Is there any skill that you know that you are good at, but, were really bad at at some point in your life?<p>What is that skill? How did you become good at it?<p>If there are books or tools or other resources that helped you in achieving that please share your story with us?
On being earnest.<p>I have a feeling that being earnest might be the actual "unlock" that unlocks everything else. A meta unlock if you will.<p>For the longest time in my life, I was very good at things but because of that I sort of never trained or practiced anything earnestly.<p>I hit my ceiling when I jumped into entrepreneurship and quickly found out that my skills which helped me with my career weren't enough.<p>I tried and tried for almost five years but nothing helped till the time I took a hard look at myself and figured out I was sort of skating through life. This is especially troublesome if you are above average in intelligence.<p>The only way to get my business of the ground and make it what I wanted it to be was for me to develop the skill of being earnest and take things from there.<p>Last year I had profits of $4 million.<p>I didn't read any books per se, it was more of taking an honest look at myself and trying to get to the root of why I was stuck.
Several actually but here is one:<p>I learned passing reading comprehension of Chinese in high school. My parents were immigrants and I left China after kindergarten so I never could read or write Chinese - this always rustled me the wrong way because I didn't like the tone my mother used when she called me "illiterate" and I was too proud to go to Sunday Chinese school (also video gaming took its toll on my social development).<p>What I did was try to memorize five simplified characters a day - I would write them down in my little notebook, copy them out by hand 100 times each. I have stacks of paper with nothing by Chinese characters written on them stashed somewhere.<p>I based the curriculum on the Chinese language grade school textbooks. At that rate I would still remember maybe 1-2 of the 5 after 6 months, so factoring the attrition by the two year mark I had enough to figure out the meaning of newspaper articles or simple dialogue. From there it was possible to fill in the gaps of unknown characters by logical deduction. Although even today as a grown man reading in Chinese is a pain.
I taught myself programming, at my first job I got up at 4AM every morning and practiced coding until leaving for work at 8AM. Then home at 7PM and programming until 10PM. Repeat until I could get a job as a programmer.<p>I taught myself Deep Learning. I saved my money until I could afford to take 3 months off, I jumped in the deep end (haha) and immersed myself in practice projects and papers for the whole 3 months -- 12+ hours a day, until I was employable as a Deep Learning engineer.<p>I taught myself Quantum Chemistry (and computational chemistry in general) by the same method, immerse myself in papers and code and just try stuff out, then I build <a href="https://atomictessellator.com" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://atomictessellator.com</a> to satisfy my own curiosity and scratch my own itch of poor comp. chem tooling.<p>Same with applied math, sink myself in papers and practice.<p>I got a job as a quant about 6 months ago, same thing, just immerse myself in the latest papers and code and practice until now - my models are the most profitable in the company.<p>I'm self taught the whole way, with no university debt, although I would admit that it takes a lot of willpower and disclipline, so isn't for most people.<p>I really enjoyed that scene in game of thrones when Sam shrugs and just says "I read the books and followed the instructions" -- thats all I do.<p>I think the thing that stops most people is they resist learning new infomation because every time there's something new there's a non-zero percentage chance in the new thing that they will not understand it and therefore be judged as inadquate, so people prefer the comfort of their little boxes, but once you shed this fear and develop an insatiable (I mean that literally) case of curiosity, everything becomes interesting, then you must develop disclipline so that your attention is not fragmented by the multiplicity of your interests.
A daily anki habit. The habit to check my cards, but also to add new ones. It's perhaps not a skill exactly, but it feels like a superpower nonetheless.<p>I started creating flashcards when I began studying spanish for my wife. --- a very common introduction to flashcards is via language learning.<p>But these days I put anything into a card that I feel is useful. It could be an actual event (like recently) with the russian attempted putsch. I might create a card like:<p>----<p>On {{c1::June 2023}}, {{c2::Yevgeny Prigozhin}} the leader of {{c3::Wagner}} group staged a rebellion by marching his troups towards Moscow after taking {{c4::Rostov-on-don}}.<p>Within hours a treaty was brokered by {{c5::Belarus}} president {{c6::Alexander Lukashenko}}<p>----<p>these facts are all salient after reading about such an important event, in the moment. But now when I talk about this event years from now, it will spring to mind. I will also be forced to think about it from time to time, and remember the crazy (big) things that happened.<p>I'll also use flashcards these days to study a new API, or learn a domain model in a new company.<p>Important is to prune and actively delete cards that no longer make sense. So I suppose the skill is realizing how to use anki. It is a bit of a living entity.<p>It's a habit/skill I've honed for over 10 years now.<p>Some recommended reading for those wanting to add flashcards into their lives.<p>1. <a href="https://cognitivemedium.com/srs-mathematics" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://cognitivemedium.com/srs-mathematics</a><p>2. <a href="http://augmentingcognition.com/ltm.html" rel="nofollow noreferrer">http://augmentingcognition.com/ltm.html</a><p>3. <a href="https://andymatuschak.org/prompts/" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://andymatuschak.org/prompts/</a><p>4. <a href="https://www.supermemo.com/en/blog/twenty-rules-of-formulating-knowledge" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://www.supermemo.com/en/blog/twenty-rules-of-formulatin...</a>
Three things!<p>1. Computer programming, although I was very young. I learned by checking out a book on BASIC from my public library in the '90s. Thankfully, my parents noticed and sent me to computer camp after that.<p>2. Parliamentary procedure. I learned through active participation in student government when I was in college. There really is no other way to learn it well without being a part of an assembly that uses (and often misuses) it.<p>3. More recently, accounting, bookkeeping, and basic federal income taxation to support my parents' small business. I learned through books I purchased. One was called "Bookkeeping made easy" and another was something like "Accounting in 100 pages or less". Tax I learned through this book published under the name JK Lasser that goes into detail on taxation. I used to go to Barnes & Noble and read the JK Lasser book to escape from my graduate school studies... which should tell you something about how much I enjoyed grad school.
Frugality and strong aversion to spending money unnecessarily. I live in the Bay Area, in a one bedroom apartment, for $45k a year after tax, and I feel my life is generally rich of experiences: I have a pleasant bike commute to work, go to many restaurants, international travel, hiking, swimming in rivers, have a loving girlfriend, etc.<p>Most people simply do not believe me. They think you have to spend $200k+ for a decent lifestyle.
Riding an electric unicycle.<p>This was one of the first truly hard and fully unintuitive "physical" things I taught myself over the course of about a month in 2019.<p>At the time I was living in New York City and youtube kept showing me cool videos of EUC's and I was curious given how solid an option for transportation they were. More range than an e-bike or scooter, small enough to wheel into elevators / buildings easily and safer than scooters (large wheel and surprisingly more stability).<p>For the first few days I was barely able to go 2-3 feet, every day I added a bit more. Then turning, then bike lanes, then the ability to stop quickly / recover from large bumps.<p>It was incredibly hard and I almost broke my wrist learning, but it was cool even at 26 to realize I could still learn something seemingly completely impossible.
Being happy even with small things. For example buying a new pen or using new tool makes me happy like a kid receiving candy. I can be happy being alone or in group of people. Slowly I am trying to have zero expectations and not to get effected by anyone actions or words.
Stick-to-it-iveness.
I'm 35 and only recognized two years ago that I had developed the ability to commit to something. I found out that my key skills, which make my resume unique, were all gained through pursuing my interests and working hard on those skills: podcasting, video editing, graphic design, engaging with strangers both online and offline, understanding complex ideas, and so on. Now I advice anyone willing to listen that the number one thing that will guarantee adaptability when life inevitably throws lemons at you is the ability to "maneuver under fire" during uncomfortable choke points in life and still come out on top.
The skill to filter out a lot of bullshit at a glance. What I mean by that is seeing or clicking on a link, news source, article, video, etc. and immediately having a strong hunch on how skeptical I should be towards it. I'm not a trained scientist or journalist or anything of that sort, but being chronically online, having spent too much time during my teens on sketchy image boards, and sifting through lots of material to find what I need to get stuff done coding have helped my ability to filter. That has always been pretty useful, I hope it stays that way for a bit longer.
How to cook not only good food, but also how do it so <i>efficiently</i> that you never get burned out on doing it. I started applying a lot of engineering principles I picked up from semiconductor manufacturing to my kitchen. You'd think this sucks all the joy out of it, but I have found the exact opposite to be true.<p>The #1 sub-skill in cooking that really keeps me going it is the practice of "mise en place", which is effectively just the preparation you do before you turn on the range. If you break the effort of cooking <i>everything</i> into multiple stages: Preparation, Execution, etc, you can make the overall experience significantly better. The mental barrier to "make stir fry" is pretty big. If you decompose that into "lets dice some chicken and then carrots and we're done for <i>the day</i>", its a lot easier negotiation.<p>Another theme for me is to batch as aggressively as you can. Even if you skip the pre-prep, economies of scale are amazing if you own a freezer and some pyrex. If you are making 1lb of taco meat, why the hell aren't you making 2? Do you like cooking everything from scratch <i>every day</i>? Most stuff still tastes just as good (and sometimes better) after a trip through the freezer.
I learned to code on my own. Whenever I took a coding class in college, I was far ahead of the course material. I learned through books, blogs, and other internet sources
Practical documentation.<p>Developed personalized markdown snippets for entire work day (Work Journal), and individual tasks (Meeting Notes, Deep Work, Support Tickets, etc.).<p>Been keeping track of every work day for 2 years. Next steps are to generate static site with search and move this method into personal life.<p>(I know, it’s sick to regiment one’s life to text. I blame it on being bit by org-mode years back.)
Public Speaking.<p>Youtube was helpful. The books I read were unhelpful. I also took a class in college but it was also unhelpful. What helped me the most was the following.<p>1) Adopt the right mindset. It is not about me; it is about the message that I believe to be so important that I am putting myself out there so the audience can hear it.<p>2) Understand the physical mechanics of voice projection. There are youtube videos that explain it well. The basic idea is that you want to strengthen your diaphragm muscle so you fill your lungs with air and that bottled-up air will result in a strong voice projection. Also work on pronunciation and enunciation; even if your voice comes across as soft -- correct enunciation will carry you through.<p>3) The first sentence you say is the most important. Jump straight into your argument. Explain the who/when/where/how/why later.
Piano and coding. One pays the bills, but I love both. I learned to play piano and currently play through sheet music. I use MuseScore and can play most "normal" music at roughly 70-80% tempo just sight reading. Then I supplement that with classical music for longer, more difficult pieces.
Remaining uncertain. I’ve seen many people becoming anxious or abnormally curious in any sort of uncertainty. One word, one question, one event and they can’t help but rush into investigating. Happens at all scales. From “You know, X said something about you yesterday” to “Why the universe exists”. I learned to be indifferent until the data comes out naturally. Otherwise you’re prone to manipulation at all scales, e.g. social life, religion and pseudoscience.<p>It’s sometimes funny when you tell “okay” to anything supposedly intriguing and they go crazy asking why don’t you care. Enjoy your manipulation failure anxiety.<p><i>How</i><p>Idk. Probably by self-education in general and by looking at how many things that were uncertain cleared up in a non-obvious way.
Learning French despite not living in a Francophone country.<p>During the pandemic I wanted to see what the process is really like for a language that I had no prior experience in. Turns out the entire popular consumer facing industry for this sort’ve thing doesn’t help for anything but tourist phrases (i.e Duolingo).<p>It took a lot of time and determination to put in the regular exposure every single day to train my ear, as well as 2-3 lessons on the internet every week for the last 2.5 years, but at this point I feel comfortable en disant que je parle français couramment.<p>Not ultimately that useful in the grand scheme of things being American, but it sure does feel nice to accomplish a goal!
Blogging.<p>I studied telecoms engineering and after graduating focused mainly in HW design and signal processing. I used to dislike options like web development that used to employ many people.<p>Years later I thought of creating my website as a hobby. Now I use wordpress, so I am perfectly aware I am not doing anything complicated. It is something simple you can just do reading internet sources. But the tasks of designing the website, and writing technical stuff in the blog, makes me feel good. It helps you a lot to organise your mind and your ideas to transmit concepts.
Sales<p>I learned trial-by-fire after starting our first business, and taking a course helped a lot<p>Books that helped a lot:
- The Charisma Myth
- SPIN Selling<p>Ultimately, learning it not only improved our business but my personal life as well
I started running 13 years ago and kept at it. Eventually I could run longer distances and I have run ultramarathons of up to 130km.
I am not good at it as in being able to win anything but it is my proudest achievement since it was hard won.
I was actually convinced of this by Socrates who was quoted saying something like: It is a shame for a man to grow old without seeing the beauty and strength of which his body is capable.
I used to be terrible at public speaking, but with practice and determination, I've become much more confident. It just goes to show that skills can be developed and improved over time with effort and perseverance.
Teaching.<p>Odd because I hated school, teachers, and public speaking.<p>Spent money to learn public speaking.<p>That was one hurdle that I couldn't figure out without help.
writing. i still don't feel that good but i've been told i am.<p>learned by reading a lot, good teachers, and writing a lot. definitely did not get good "on my own".<p>i also like to not write well as a poetic exercise. luv to get shit on by a reddit user for my poor grammar when doing internet-speak.