Day 168 – The Ninety-Five Percent Rule

I was thinking about consistency the other day, and a strange truth settled in. If you spend a few moments every day working on learning or improving at anything, and you do that consistently for a year, you will still not be very good at it. That sounds discouraging. But here is the part that matters. You will be better than ninety-five percent of the human population at whatever it was you chose to focus on.

That gap between “not very good” and “better than most” is where most of us get stuck. We imagine mastery or we imagine nothing. We think a year of daily practice should make us experts, and when it does not, we assume we failed. But the truth is simpler and more useful. Most people never start. Most people who start do not keep going. And most people who keep going do not keep going long enough to see what a year of small efforts can build.

The math is not complicated. A few moments each day is not much. Ten minutes, maybe fifteen. Over a year, that adds up to sixty or seventy hours. That is not enough to become great. It is barely enough to scratch the surface. But it is enough to separate you from nearly everyone else who thought about doing the same thing and never did.

I have seen this play out in my own life. I started writing every morning, not because I had grand ambitions, but because I wanted to see if I could. The first few months were rough. The words felt clumsy. The ideas felt thin. I was not good at it. But I kept showing up. A year later, I was still not a master, but I was better than I had been. More importantly, I was better than most people who said they wanted to write but never put in the time.

The reason this works is not because daily practice is magic. It works because most people do not practice at all. They think about it. They plan for it. They wait for the right moment or the right mood or the right conditions. And while they wait, the person who started anyway, even badly, pulls ahead.

“Most people never start, and most who start do not keep going long enough to see what a year of small efforts can build.”

So if you are thinking about learning something, or improving at something, or building a skill you do not yet have, start small. Start today. Spend a few moments on it. Do not worry about being good. Do not worry about being great. Just show up. Do it again tomorrow. And the day after that. A year from now, you will not be a master. But you will be better than almost everyone else who thought about it and did nothing.

That is the ninety-five percent rule. It is not about talent. It is not about luck. It is about showing up when most people do not.

Subscribe
Notify of
guest
0 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Share the Post:

Recent Blogs

Day 278 – The Process of Letting Go

This article redefines repentance as a practical method for letting go of past mistakes, emphasizing honesty, responsibility, self-forgiveness, and reframing the narrative to foster growth and move forward. It offers a structured approach to processing past actions without being paralyzed by them.

Read More

Day 277 – Root Cause Analysis

This article explores the concept of identifying and addressing the root causes of problems, rather than just treating symptoms. It uses the metaphor of a tree growing around a railroad spike to illustrate how small, unaddressed issues can become deeply embedded and harder to fix over time. The author emphasizes the value of problem discovery as a discipline that requires patience, courage, and a willingness to look beyond the obvious.

Read More

Day 276 – Eat the Frog Before 10 A.M.

This article advocates for tackling your most challenging or undesirable task first thing in the morning, ideally before 10 A.M. By “eating the frog” early, you gain momentum, avoid procrastination, and ensure that important commitments are not derailed by daily distractions, leading to a more aligned and productive day.

Read More

Day 275 – Impossible North Star

This article explores the power of setting ambitious, seemingly impossible goals and pairing them with small, consistent daily actions. It argues that large goals foster personal growth and devotion, while small daily commitments ensure sustainability and build identity, ultimately leading to significant progress.

Read More
0
Would love your thoughts, please comment.x
()
x