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yardshop | 6 months ago
I've mostly heard it in the context of building and construction videos where they are approaching a new skill or technique and have to remind themselves to slow down.
Going slowly and being careful leads to fewer mistakes, which will be a "smoother" process and ends up taking less time, whereas going too fast and making mistakes means work has to be redone and ultimately takes longer.
On rereading it, I see some parallels: When one is trying to go too fast, and is possibly becoming impatient with their progress, their mental queue fills up and processing suffers. If one accepts a slower pace, one's natural single-tasking capability will work better, and they will make better progress as a result.
And maybe its just my selection bias working hard to confirm that he actually is talking about what I want him to say!
wallflower|6 months ago
There is a saying: “You don’t rise your level when performing. You fall to your level of practice.”
JasonSage|6 months ago
milesvp|6 months ago
persedes|6 months ago
bluedino|6 months ago
Common to hear this in auto racing and probably a lot of other fields
eszed|6 months ago
c0nsumer|6 months ago
hbarka|6 months ago
Austizzle|6 months ago
anonymars|6 months ago