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Are you sure "fake it til you make it" is the correct term for this idea? I'm familiar with the term, but usually in a different context.

Regardless, you're spot on.

My silly anecdote: Back in university I used to play pick-up two's volleyball a couple nights a week. At the other end of that same gym, the school team would practice, occasionally overlapping with the pick-up folks.

One day, their practice broke up around the same time as a game of sixes ended, so me & my partner wandered down and challenged a couple of the Team guys to a game of twos. It was quite memorable. 15-1, if I recall, and really not even that close. Pretty humbling, since we could certainly hang against anybody else we'd played up to that point.

But we stuck at it. Over the next couple months, we'd ask for games off those guys from time to time. 15-4. 15-8. 15-7. Then one day we lost 15-12. Fifteen to Twelve. Against a guy with a four foot vertical leap and a guy with one of those crazy olympic jump serves. Guys who were having their tuition paid for playing this sport. Wow.

And it's not like we went back and proceeded to dominate from there on out. Sure, we were better, but not that much better. We were better when we were playing better players. We were only playing that well because we were playing up to their level. It was quite a thing to see.

I've seen this same thing again and again over the years, particularly with Rock Climbing, where a group of people can attack a boulder problem that's way over any one of their abilities, and eventually get not just one guy over the top, but everybody, because of the group energy.

I can't see why it wouldn't be the same with programming.




Playing up to your opponent's level can happen in tennis too. One of the factors I think might be coming into play, especially in a sport like volleyball or tennis, is that your opponent is directly across from you and their play provides a mental model for you during the game. You can subconsciously mimic what they do, and their actions during the game act as a constant reminder for how to play well.

I noticed this snow skiing too. I had learned to ski when I was four and went multiple times a year every year, but I lived in Texas so it wasn't an everyday event. Then one mogul run I followed directly behind a more advanced skier, mimicking his moves and rhythm, and all of a sudden on that run it clicked -- my skill level shot up several folds.


If you're interested in anecdotes about this, consider reading http://thedanplan.com/blog/ - Dan quit his job to learn to play golf, something he'd never done before. Currently he's at 3000 hours of practice...


Believe in the you who believes in yourself. That's the accurate way of phrasing it.


That's a great story Jason. Thanks for sharing. I think this is precisely what happens in software development.




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