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669 points sonabinu | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.321s | source
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gsabo ◴[] No.42201370[source]
I agree with the sentiment of this. I think our obsession with innate mathematical skill and genius is so detrimental to the growth mindset that you need to have in order to learn things.

I've been working a lot on my math skills lately (as an adult). A mindset I've had in the past is that "if it's hard, then that means you've hit your ceiling and you're wasting your time." But really, the opposite is true. If it's easy, then it means you already know this material, and you're wasting your time.

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1. dkarl ◴[] No.42206252[source]
> If it's easy, then it means you already know this material, and you're wasting your time

I think that's also a trap. Even professional athletes spend a little bit of their time doing simple drills: shooting free throws, fielding fly balls, hitting easy groundstrokes.

Sometimes your daily work keeps up the "easy" skills, but if you haven't used a skill in a while, it's not a bad idea to do some easy reps before you try to combine it with other skills in difficult ways.