Progress in any field feels super fast at the beginningāskills 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, Iāve been stuck trying to break past 1:06, hovering at 1:06.043. At this point, it's no longer about full secondsānow weāre talking tenths and hundredths.
Of course, there are technical limits, physics, and plain old luck. But itās exactly these ālast 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, itāll take a completely different level of commitment and self-improvement.
To sum it up, here are two key takeaways:
1ļøā£ If you feel like you're progressing quickly in something, youāre probably still far from mastery. The easier and more noticeable the improvements, the more room you still have to grow.
2ļøā£ 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" wonāt cut it. Itās about fine-tuning, thinking outside the box, and obsessing over the smallest details.