Constantly improving your skill set is one of the only ways to future-proof yourself. If you follow this guide, you’ll be better equipped to learn anything you’ve ever wished to learn.
The more smartly-practiced skills you learn, the faster you’ll learn other connected skills. And knowing your skill mastery and the direction they’re going gives you the clarity on what to learn next for maximum learning efficiency.
We are lagging behind evolution for the first time since 350,000 years, and it’s time to do something about it. Let’s build a collective intelligence and solve this before it’s too late!
Skill learning doesn’t have to be tedious. It can be really fun and you’ll be amazed how much you can actually learn in only 15–20 hours of deliberate practice!
Learning is hard. Especially when you’re not using the right approach based on your goals. The right approach for others might not be the same for you. That’s why you need to know what learner archetype you are.
If you don’t cope, you won’t adapt to the new reality and be left behind. It’s a tough world, and it’s not getting any easier with the passing years. Tomorrow’s problems will be different from today’s, so the only way to thrive in every situation is to become more adaptable.
We have the power to make positive change. Some positive things will happen on their own, for others, we’ll have to fight for. But the opportunity is greater than ever for positive change.
Getting rid of these productivity killers can do wonders for your time. Practice the sub-skills mentioned in the article. Master them. It’s time to claim back your time. You can do this.
If you want your life to change, you have to fail more, not less. And when you record your failures regularly, you’ll begin to see them for what they are: life lessons.
By filling out your Map of Life regularly, you gain more self-awareness. You are aware of where you should focus your energy and gain more motivation by doing the things that really matter to you.
A skill tree is a visual representation of sub-skills required to learn a larger skill. It’s an ongoing document where you record your progress and learning material.
Humans tend to overcomplicate things that can be easy. Make your life easier. Go to market faster. Get feedback faster. Apply to 1–50 rule to your projects.
If the nature of your work entails operating alone, then you’ll just have to create opportunities of your own. From working in shared spaces to making time for fitness classes, here are five things you can do to build social connections as a remote worker.
The reward isn’t in the gifts you get each other. It’s not about the extravagant things you do. It’s about the everyday goodness that brings you together.