<aside> 💡 This was written in a conversational memo for a friend, but pulled out to fit standalone here. We were talking through the right combination of “learning” and “doing” in life, and I had been in a fairly intense “learning” period without much “doing”.
</aside>
Learning is like leveling up. But, I can’t spend all of my time leveling up my character — at some point I have to go on raids or whatever (I’m clearly not a WoW guy), or else why am I spending time leveling up? If my goal is to accomplish to most toward my direction of “progress” (though the direction here is still subject to change), there is a theoretical optimization point between maxing character stats and actually doing things.
To show you how I’m thinking about it, let’s play a turn-based board game in the Dune-verse. I’m stuck in an infinite 2D desert (representing all of the end states I could end up in my life), trying to get as north as possible, where north is the optimal direction for accomplishing the most “progress” (you can even put your own definition of progress in here!).
Each turn, I can either:
With these rules set out, it becomes pretty clear that there’s an optimal combination of all three actions if you want to maximize how far north you get. Unfortunately I have no analogy for the sandworms yet.