A willingness to look stupid is the most underrated moat in doing creative work
5 days ago
- #fear-of-failure
- #writing
- #creativity
- The author struggles with publishing their writing despite being a better writer now compared to the past when they published more freely.
- Richard Hamming's observation that early recognition can 'sterilize' creativity, as seen with Nobel Prize winners who stop producing great work due to high expectations.
- Young people often produce good ideas because they are free from expectations and unafraid of looking stupid.
- The creative process involves generating many bad ideas to eventually find good ones, as illustrated by the 'Aadil’s Law' anecdote.
- Evolution's success relies on producing many mutations, most of which are bad, to find the few beneficial ones, similar to the creative process.
- Two failure modes in sharing ideas: oversharing and looking stupid, or undersharing and never doing anything interesting.
- The key to overcoming the fear of sharing is to focus on producing and sharing something, regardless of its quality, rather than aiming for perfection.
- The author reflects on their past self, who was less skilled but more courageous in sharing their work, and misses that freedom.
- The ultimate barrier to creativity and sharing ideas is the fear of looking stupid, not a lack of talent or intelligence.