Heero(dom male) |
10 months ago •
Dec 24, 2023
10 months ago •
Dec 24, 2023
Heero(dom male) • Dec 24, 2023
Sincorrigible wrote: CageOwner wrote: I would go as far as saying putting in a big effort has been negatively correlated to “success”. My theory is: if you heat up a cheeseburger for someone and they get all excited the summit is near. If you need to cook someone a 4 course meal to get a simple nod (and they wouldn’t have accepted less than that just to nod) you still have a Mount Everest to climb. This is fascinating to me. I cannot think of any other sphere, outside of dating, where one would say this. In everything in which I have invested great effort, the result is 'success', though that may be defined in many ways. It implies two things maybe: you cannot necessarily set goals that involve other people, and you need to be self aware. Dating is a funny one, because it begins as generic, especially in an online environment, long before it is about a specific person. Fascinating. I think the takeaway would be something like "one should exert the appropriate amount of effort for the occasion and the phase of the occasion that you find yourself in." Sometimes this could mean putting *less* effort into something. There are many times and many spheres in which exerting more effort after a certain point is negatively correlated with success, however it is defined. Heck, there are even cases where more effort is directly correlated with failure. Another cooking example: there are many dishes that require you to slow cook something at a low heat. Turning up the heat does not make it cook faster or better, it actually directly ruins the dish. ======== Another thing I might want to emphasize, that may be missed by the cheeseburger example, is that "less" here usually refers to quantity not quality. The goal would be to pretty much always put forward high quality effort, but just maybe not too much. It's the difference between being able to write a great American novel, but knowing you should just write a great paragraph instead. You don't intentionally want to write a shitty paragraph. But writing a whole high quality novel may be too much. At times, one should settle for writing a high quality paragraph. Now, if someone likes your paragraph, then you can write more and more and more and eventually, they will have a novel from you. And you maintain or increase the quality as time goes on. Whereas if you start by writing the best novel you could, and someone is unimpressed, then yeah, you got a Mount Everest to climb alright. I think this is also the idea behind pilot episodes for a TV show. You don't want the pilot to be shitty, because no one would produce the show. But you don't want to put in the effort to write the whole show and then that gets rejected. |
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