Can You Really Become A Black Belt In Your Field?

by Anton on February 19, 2008

Bruce LeeI was reading this great article by Steve Pavlina called What Are The Odds Of Becoming A Blackbelt?, and I was totally inspired.

Think about it–when you start your graduate studies you’re basically trying to become a black belt in your field. When you start out, you may totally feel like a white belt (a beginner), and the road ahead seems long and hard, especially if you’ve heard stories of people who tried to get their grad degrees but then dropped out.

But that is why it’s such a worthy endeavor–for any field where it’s a huge accomplishment there will be a good number of people who have tried and failed, but that doesn’t mean that your chances of succeeding are lowered.

Your mindset and your ability to think like a black belt in training can have a significant impact on your ability to do well in graduate school.

Here are Steve’s helpful tips:

Don’t let it bother you that you suck at first.

“When you start out in a brand new field with no experience, you’re going to suck… most likely really suck. If you’re lucky your results will just be bad instead of painfully bad. But screwing up is perfectly OK. That’s supposed to happen. Screwing up is how you learn. Every mistake helps you make new distinctions and increase your skill.”

Commit to mastery.

“Pulling away from the pack in any field is largely a matter of choice. That choice is a commitment to mastery. But very few will make this choice because it requires hard work, resolve, patience, self-discipline, and a long time perspective.”

Stay with it for the long term.

“If you want to succeed in a new field where you lack experience, you should be thinking of at least a 3-5 year commitment. If that scares you away, then save yourself the time you would have spent dabbling, and don’t bother.”

Don’t be discouraged by reports of people who fail.

“You’ll find a small percentage of people who are really committed to mastery, but the rest have virtually no hope of notable success. As you build skill, which normally takes years to achieve competency in any worthwhile field, you move out of the 99% and into the 1%. Dabblers will enter the field, try it for six months, and give up after concluding it’s too hard. A challenging field is good though because it means your long-term investment in skill-building will mean something, like a black belt. It wouldn’t be much of an accomplishment if it was too easy.”

Yeah, it wouldn’t be that big a deal to get your master’s degree if it was easy–remember that! It’s encouraging to remember that every expert started out as a complete novice. :-)

Photo Bruce Lee

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