
Welcome to The Vault.
Every Sunday, I send out ten pieces of winningcore—insights, lessons, and stories to help you win in business, sports, and life.
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On Urgency

On Finding Your “Thing”

On Perseverance

— Vincent Van Gogh
On Starting Over

On Giving Everything

— Tim Grover, Winning
On Diligence
Most people don’t know that Steve Martin (actor) is also a world class, award winning banjo player. This is a passage from Cal Newport’s book ‘So Good They Can’t Ignore You’ that I read years ago and it stuck with me:
‘In his 2007 interview with Charlie Rose, here's how Steve Martin explained his strategy for learning the banjo: "[I thought], if I stay with it, then one day I will have been playing for forty years, and anyone who sticks with something for forty years will be pretty good at it."
To me, this is a phenomenal display of patience.
Learning clawhammer banjo is hard, and because of this, Martin was willing to look forty years into the future for the payoff-a recognition of the frustrating months of hard work and mediocre playing ahead. In his memoir, Martin expounds on this idea when he discusses the importance of "diligence" for his success in the entertainment business. What's interesting is that Martin redefines the word so that it's less about paying attention to your main pursuit, and more about your willingness to ignore other pursuits that pop up along the way to distract you. The final step for applying deliberate practice to your working life is to adopt this style of diligence.
The logic works as follows: Acquiring capital can take time. For Alex, it took about two years of serious deliberate practice before his first television script was produced. Mike Jackson was a half decade out of college before cashing in his capital to land a dream job.
This is why Martin's diligence is so important: Without this patient willingness to reject shiny new pursuits, you'll derail your efforts before you acquire the capital you need. I think the image of Martin returning to his banjo, day after day, for forty years, is poignant. It captures well the feel of how career capital is actually acquired: You stretch yourself, day after day, month after month, before finally looking up and realizing, "Hey, I've become pretty good, and people are starting to notice.”’
On The Work Razor

On Mastering The Basics
“Kobe was going through an intense warm up before his scheduled workout started with his trainer.
I sat down to watch.
For the first 45 minutes I was actually shocked.
For the first 45 minutes I watched the best player in the world do the most basic footwork and offensive moves.
Kobe was doing stuff that I had routinely taught to middle school aged players
This is Kobe Bryant we're talking about.
This is the Black Mamba.
He was doing everything at an unparalleled level of effort with unparalleled focus, but the actual stuff he was doing was very, very basic.
Later that day at camp I went up to him and said:
“Kobe, I don't understand. You're the best player in the world. Why are you doing such basic drills?”
He said:
“Why do you think I'm the best player in the world? Because I never get bored with the basics. I *never* get bored with the basics.”
— Alan Stein Jr.
On Inspiration

— @naval
On Screen Time

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