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… více »1 <1 ms <1 ms <1 ms router.asus.com [192.168.1.1] 2 * * * Request timed out. 3 * * * Request timed out. 4 8 ms * 8 ms 122.197.broadband16.iol.cz [90.183.197.122] 5 9 ms 10 ms 10 ms 194.228.190.5 6 8 ms 8 ms 8 ms nix4.seznam.cz [91.210.16.195] 7 9 ms 8 ms * n7k-ko-a-vdc-1-po1.seznam.cz [185.66.188.7] 8 9 ms 8 ms 9 ms n7k-ko-a-vdc-2-po3.seznam.cz [185.66.188.25] 9 8 ms * 9 ms www.seznam.cz [77.75.79.39] Trace complete. C:\Users\Jardik>tracert www.seznam.cz Tracing route to www.seznam.cz [77.75.79.39] over a maximum of 30 hops: 1 <1 ms <1 ms <1 ms router.asus.com [192.168.1.1] 2 * * * Request timed out. 3 * 7 ms 7 ms 123.197.broadband16.iol.cz [90.183.197.123] 4 8 ms 8 ms 7 ms 122.197.broadband16.iol.cz [90.183.197.122] 5 10 ms 9 ms 11 ms 194.228.190.5 6 9 ms 9 ms 8 ms nix4.seznam.cz [91.210.16.195] 7 10 ms * 8 ms n7k-ko-a-vdc-1-po1.seznam.cz [185.66.188.7] 8 9 ms 9 ms 9 ms n7k-ko-a-vdc-2-po3.seznam.cz [185.66.188.25] 9 8 ms 9 ms 8 ms www.seznam.cz [77.75.79.39] Trace complete. C:\Users\Jardik>tracert www.seznam.cz Tracing route to www.seznam.cz [77.75.79.39] over a maximum of 30 hops: 1 <1 ms <1 ms <1 ms router.asus.com [192.168.1.1] 2 * * * Request timed out. 3 * * * Request timed out. 4 8 ms 8 ms 8 ms 122.197.broadband16.iol.cz [90.183.197.122] 5 10 ms 10 ms 9 ms 194.228.190.5 6 9 ms 8 ms 9 ms nix4.seznam.cz [91.210.16.195] 7 12 ms 9 ms 9 ms n7k-ko-a-vdc-1-po1.seznam.cz [185.66.188.7] 8 8 ms 9 ms 9 ms n7k-ko-a-vdc-2-po3.seznam.cz [185.66.188.25] 9 8 ms 9 ms 8 ms www.seznam.cz [77.75.79.39]
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1. Value learning over money In 1718, Josiah Franklin decided to bring his twelve-year-old son Benjamin into his lucrative, family-run candle-making business in Boston as an apprentice. His idea was that after a seven-year apprenticeship and a little experience, Benjamin would take over the business. But Benjamin had other ideas. He threatened to run away to sea if his father did not give him the choice of where he could apprentice. The father had already lost another son who had run away, and so he relented. To the father’s surprise, his son chose to work in an older brother’s recently opened printing business. Such a business would mean harder work and the apprenticeship would last nine instead of seven years. Also, the printing business was notoriously fickle, and it was quite a risk to bank one’s future on it. But that was his choice, his father decided. Let him learn the hard way. What young Benjamin had not told his father was that he was determined to become a writer. Most of the work in the shop would involve manual labor and operating machines, but every now and then he would be asked to proofread and copyedit a pamphlet or text. And there would always be new books around. Several years into the process, he discovered that some of his favorite writing came from the English newspapers the shop would reprint. He asked to be the one to oversee the printing of such articles, giving him the chance to study these texts in detail and teach himself how to imitate their style in his own work. Over the years he managed to turn this into a most efficient apprenticeship for writing, with the added benefit of having learned the printing business well. --- After graduating from the Zurich Polytechnic in 1900, the twenty-one-year-old Albert Einstein found his job prospects extremely meager. He had graduated near the bottom of the class, almost certainly nullifying any chance to obtain a teaching position. Happy to be away from the university, he now planned to investigate, on his own, certain problems in physics that had haunted him for several years. It would be a self-apprenticeship in theorizing and thought experiments. But in the meantime, he would have to make a living. He had been offered a job in his father’s dynamo business in Milan as an engineer, but such work would not leave him any free time. A friend could land him a well-paid position in an insurance company, but that would stultify his brain and sap his energy for thinking. Then, a year later, another friend mentioned a job opening up in the Swiss Patent Office in Bern. The pay was not great, the position was at the bottom, the hours were long, and the work consisted of the rather mundane task of looking over patent applications, but Einstein leaped at the chance. It was everything he wanted. His task would be to analyze the validity of patent applications, many of which involved aspects of science that interested him. The applications would be like little puzzles or thought experiments; he could try to visualize how the ideas would actually translate into inventions. Working on them would sharpen his reasoning powers. After several months on the job, he became so good at this mental game that he could finish his work in two or three hours, leaving him the rest of the day to engage in his own thought experiments. In 1905 he published his first theory of relativity, much of the work having been done while he was at his desk in the Patent Office. --- Martha Graham (see here for more on her early years) first trained as a dancer at the Denishawn School in Los Angeles, but after several years she determined she had learned enough and needed to go elsewhere to sharpen her skills. She ended up in New York, and in 1924 was offered a two-year stint as a dancer in a follies’ show; it was well paid, and so she accepted. Dancing is dancing, she thought, and she could always work on her own ideas in her free time. But near the end of the term, she decided she would never again accept commercial work. It drained her of all of her creative energy and destroyed her desire to work on her own time. It also made her feel dependent on a paycheck. What is important when you are young, she decided, is to train yourself to get by with little money and make the most of your youthful energy. For the next few years she would work as a dance teacher, keeping her hours to the minimum for survival. The rest of the time she would train herself in the new style of dancing she wanted to create. Knowing the alternative was slavery to some commercial job, she made the most of every free minute, creating in these few years the groundwork for the most radical revolution in modern dance. --- As previously narrated in chapter 1 (see here), when Freddie Roach’s career as a boxer came to an end in 1986, he took a job as a telemarketer in Las Vegas. One day, he entered the gym where he himself had trained under the legendary coach Eddie Futch. He found many boxers there who were not receiving any personalized attention from Futch. Even though he was not asked, he began to hang around the gym every afternoon and help out. It turned into a job for which he was not paid, so he held on to his telemarketing position. Working the two jobs left just enough time to sleep. It was almost unbearable, but he could withstand it because he was learning the trade for which he knew was destined. Within a few years he had impressed enough young boxers with his knowledge to set up his own business, and was soon to become the most successful boxing trainer of his generation. It is a simple law of human psychology that your thoughts will tend to revolve around what you value most. If it is money, you will choose a place for your apprenticeship that offers the biggest paycheck. Inevitably, in such a place you will feel greater pressures to prove yourself worthy of such pay, often before you are really ready. You will be focused on yourself, your insecurities, the need to please and impress the right people, and not on acquiring skills. It will be too costly for you to make mistakes and learn from them, so you will develop a cautious, conservative approach. As you progress in life, you will become addicted to the fat paycheck and it will determine where you go, how you think, and what you do. Eventually, the time that was not spent on learning skills will catch up with you, and the fall will be painful. Instead, you must value learning above everything else. This will lead you to all of the right choices. You will opt for the situation that will give you the most opportunities to learn, particularly with hands-on work. You will choose a place that has people and mentors who can inspire and teach you. A job with mediocre pay has the added benefit of training you to get by with less—a valuable life skill. If your apprenticeship is to be mostly on your own time, you will choose a place that pays the bills—perhaps one that keeps your mind sharp, but that also leaves you the time and mental space to do valuable work on your own. You must never disdain an apprenticeship with no pay. In fact, it is often the height of wisdom to find the perfect mentor and offer your services as an assistant for free. Happy to exploit your cheap and eager spirit, such mentors will often divulge more than the usual trade secrets. In the end, by valuing learning above all else, you will set the stage for your creative expansion, and the money will soon come to you.
Neřekl bych, že hodnocení myšlenky podle jejího autora je něco úctyhodného.Nevím co to má společného s úctyhodností. Psal jsem o hodnocení zdrojů myšlenek, nikoliv myšlenek jako takových. Jinými slovy, nemám čas vyhodnocovat všechno co sem kdo napíše, proto prioritizuji na základě reputace zdroje. To mi přijde jako heuristika s nejlepším poměrem zisku k vložené námaze, ale samozřejmě se rád nechám poučit, pokud máš něco lepšího.