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🚧 Limits of the progress


Progress in any field feels super fast at the beginning—skills grow, results improve, and every new step feels like a breakthrough. But the better you get, the harder it is to keep moving forward.

I realized this through my own experience with go-karting. When I first hit what is now my home track, Daytona in Nicosia, my initial lap time was 1:17. Just three practice sessions later, I shaved it down to 1:09. But cutting another couple of seconds to reach 1:07 took way more effort and time.

And now, for over six months, I’ve been stuck trying to break past 1:06, hovering at 1:06.043. At this point, it's no longer about full seconds—now we’re talking tenths and hundredths.

Of course, there are technical limits, physics, and plain old luck. But it’s exactly these ā€œlast few secondsā€ that bring you closer to the top drivers, who finish the same track in 1:04.387. And to bridge that two-second gap, it’ll take a completely different level of commitment and self-improvement.

To sum it up, here are two key takeaways:

1ļøāƒ£ If you feel like you're progressing quickly in something, you’re probably still far from mastery. The easier and more noticeable the improvements, the more room you still have to grow.

2ļøāƒ£ To get better than 80% of people at something, just practice consistently. But to break into the top 1%, the effort required skyrockets. At that level, the competition is completely different, and just "practicing a little more" won’t cut it. It’s about fine-tuning, thinking outside the box, and obsessing over the smallest details.
2025-03-12 11:05 Life