Find a professional in your field (a doctor, a lawyer, a mechanic). Ask them the five dumbest questions you can think of. "Why is that bolt round?" "Why can't we just glue the pipe?" Watch them struggle to answer. Their struggle is the proof that amateurs see what experts ignore.
Neuroscientists call this the "Beginner’s Glow." When you are new to a task (playing the piano, coding, welding), your brain lights up like a Christmas tree. The prefrontal cortex is hyperactive. Neuroplasticity is at its peak. You are making thousands of new connections per second.
Edwin Land, the inventor of the Polaroid camera, was not a chemist or a physicist by training. He was an amateur enthusiast who dropped out of Harvard. His "newness" to the field allowed him to ask a question no expert would ask: "Why do we have to wait for photos to develop?" Amateurs be new; professionals be stuck. Part 3: The Neuroscience of "Being New" – How Amateurs Learn Faster Here is the counterintuitive truth: When you are an amateur, you are a learning machine. amateur be new
You will fail. The amateur podcast will have zero listeners for six months. That is the "newness tax." Pay it. Every master has a closet full of failed amateurs.
Consider the "Dunning-Kruger Effect," but flip it. Experts often suffer from tunnel vision. They know what cannot be done. Amateurs, because they "be new," don't know the rules. And by not knowing the rules, they accidentally break them. Find a professional in your field (a doctor,
What the world needs now is the
You dive into a subject. You stay an amateur for 1-3 years. You get good enough to have fun. Then, the moment you feel the boredom of expertise creeping in—the moment you start saying "We've always done it this way"—you quit. You move to a completely new domain. Their struggle is the proof that amateurs see
Now go be new. Go be amateur. Go be the beginner you were always meant to be. amateur be new, beginner mindset, perpetual amateur, start fresh, innovation from inexperience, learning psychology, overcome fear of failure, love of learning vs. expertise.