Yes
This reminds me of the Shu-Ha-Ri model for mastery:
- Shu (to obey): Learn to operate according to the rules.
- Ha (to break): Begin to challenge and adapt the rules.
- Ri (to transcend): Create new rules.
The Paradox of Mastery
These incredible images were made more than 100 years ago by a Welsh singer named Margaret Watts Hughes — not by her hand but rather using her voice and an Eidophone, a "recording" device of her own invention. She would sing into the Eidophone's funnel and so make its diaphragm vibrate. She'd then bring this vibrating diaphragm in contact with a... See more
instagram.comOne issue with corporate comms is there’s too much “how to build a boat” and not enough “why you should should yearn for the vast and endless sea”
Lulu Cheng Meservey • Tweet
sometimes the most important thing we can do is let ourselves stay blurry. to be unbranded, unpositioned, undone for a while. because real self-knowledge is a slow, unmarketable process. and the lost feeling might just be the first sign that you’ve finally stopped performing someone else’s idea of a good life.
milk and cookies • why feeling lost might mean you’re finally doing it right
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