At the age of 12, I went to comic book camp. It’s where young kids can go to learn how to create their own comic books. I went on to create a whole universe of characters that would make Marvel jealous.
That same year, I also spent a week at coding camp where I learned to write code for tiny robots. In my lifetime, I have learned a lot of things. Like writing screenplays, the original HTML code, how to work on my 1982 Camaro, and much more.
Looking back in hindsight, I don’t do any of that stuff. None of it does me any good at this point. I’m not complaining, but it’s a shame I wasted all that knowledge.
So today, we’re talking about the doing.
“Once you apply something, you become accountable for it.”
IN THIS EPISODE
- All about comic book camp.
- Feedback I received about an idea I had for a conference.
- Why people don’t want to apply the knowledge they’ve learned.
- Stop calling it a hobby.
- Pushing past the fear and stepping into the application.
- Setting goals and actually doing what it takes to achieve them.
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