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Don't Ask 'What to Learn,' Ask 'What to Build'

3 pointsby spikey_sanju8 months ago

3 comments

scrapheap8 months ago
Learning and building are two complementary activities and saying you should concentrate on one more than the other doesn&#x27;t feel like good advice. If you&#x27;re not learning then you can&#x27;t build well and if you&#x27;re not building then you&#x27;re missing a significant part of the learning experience.<p>However the underlying message from the article is directly applicable to both building and learning - You need to be motivated when doing either. Which for me is where both the &quot;What to learn&quot; and &quot;What to build&quot; questions fall down, it&#x27;s like we&#x27;re hoping we can steal someone else&#x27;s motivation just by trying to do something they&#x27;ve been interested in the past. In my experience motivation doesn&#x27;t come on demand, instead it&#x27;s something that hides when we&#x27;re looking for it, but will ambush us when we&#x27;re not looking (e.g. I wasn&#x27;t looking to get philosophical today, but this article has motivated me to contemplate motivation itself).
spikey_sanju8 months ago
Don&#x27;t start by asking &#x27;what to learn.&#x27; It&#x27;s the wrong approach. If you don&#x27;t know where you&#x27;re going, how will you know when you get there?
spikey_sanju8 months ago
thanks. you make good points about learning &amp; building. they do go hand in hand.<p>my main message is about finding your &quot;why&quot; first. why learn? why build? that&#x27;s where motivation comes from.<p>i&#x27;ve seen too many folks burn out learning tech they don&#x27;t care about. or building things that don&#x27;t excite them.<p>start with what fires you up. the rest follows.<p>you&#x27;re right - motivation is tricky. it comes and goes. but having a clear goal helps a ton when it dips!!!