“You don’t believe in natural talent?”
“The premise can be insidious. If we find something doesn’t come naturally, we might conclude we have no talent for it and abandon the pursuit, even if it’s to our detriment.”
“So what causes success?”
“If you believe in deliberate practice, artfully designed hard work and always stretching beyond your abilities. It’s not as simple as ‘Practice makes perfect.’ It’s continually focusing on your weakest elements and trying to improve them. Those who persevere are high achievers.”
“…The key lies in knowing what you deeply want. The more you want something, the easier it is to sweat through the deliberate practice.”
“So you make your own luck?…”
Kerry Reichs in Leaving Unknown
Kerry seems to be describing Gladwell’s Rule of 10,000. The concept is quite simple. If you put 10,000 hours into something–anything–you will be successful. Whether you begin with ‘natural talent’ or not, those hours (3 hours a day for ten years apparently) will turn you into a master. If you aren’t willing to put in the time, you’re not going to have the success.
This might explain who so many first time novelists are in their 40s. If you’ve been raising kids, you probably haven’t been able to get in your hours!! I tend to think there is something to this. You have to apply yourself to your passion. Luckily, passion makes the hours go quickly.
So what do you think?
