From Amateur To Pro: The Premise - Deepstash
From Amateur To Pro: The Premise

From Amateur To Pro: The Premise

  • The defining trait of the amateur is the fear of being who she is and getting rejected for it.
  • A central obstacle for the amateur is that he always chases some guru or authority.
  • When you do your work for the sake of its practice and nothing else, that’s when you turn pro.

21

111 reads

CURATED FROM

IDEAS CURATED BY

melanicampbel

Scientist in research (physical sciences)

Enlightenment in a simple way.

The idea is part of this collection:

De-escalate Office Tension

Learn more about motivationandinspiration with this collection

How to create a positive work environment

Conflict resolution strategies

Effective communication in the workplace

Related collections

Similar ideas to From Amateur To Pro: The Premise

The Five Keys To Mastery

  • Instruction: For mastering most skills, there's nothing better than being in the hands of a master teacher, either one-to-one or in a small group. 
  • Practice: It can be anything you practice on a regular basis as an integral part of your life—not in o...

The Need to Be Right

Compelling the other person to be wrong is a terrible trait to have and can be extremely destructive in relationships. This need usually stems from the fear of being disrespected or from the fear of being seen for who you are, a flawed person that makes mistakes...

What we learn from a crisis---or ought to

  • Too much capital availability makes money flow to the wrong places.
  • When capital goes where it shouldn’t, bad things happen. 
  • When capital is in oversupply, investors compete for deals by accepting low returns and a slender margin for error.When peo...

Read & Learn

20x Faster

without
deepstash

with
deepstash

with

deepstash

Personalized microlearning

100+ Learning Journeys

Access to 200,000+ ideas

Access to the mobile app

Unlimited idea saving

Unlimited history

Unlimited listening to ideas

Downloading & offline access

Supercharge your mind with one idea per day

Enter your email and spend 1 minute every day to learn something new.

Email

I agree to receive email updates