Sunday 14 June 2015

The Myth of the Training Montage

Whether you’re watching The Karate Kid, Mulan, or Rocky, the trope of the training montage is designed to show characters getting good at something quickly.

This is a problem because these montages, from classic movies which we’re all likely to have seen, teach us that real-life success is supposed to come as quickly as it does in the movies. When it inevitably doesn’t, it can be discouraging, as is often the case when we’re taught to expect one thing and something else happens instead.

These movies also fail our expectations when they show training to be an exciting event. Training is probably going to be boring, and it’s definitely going to be hard.

Good.

No one is cheering you on when you’re learning HTML at night after a full day of work.

No one is there to pick you up when you stumble during a practice drill that’s lit by moonlight.

No one is there when you’re combing through the 2000-page textbook trying to find the specific sub-section of the tax code you’re looking for.

When you finally build that app, or throw that game-winning pass, or get that Big Four job, those are the moments of glory, and they should be savoured. These are the peaks of life, and they are separated by incredibly long valleys.

The valleys aren’t meant to be “troughs”—they’re not bad, they’re just necessary. Most of your life will probably be spent becoming good at something. You might not be passionate about that thing for the first few weeks or months, but you keep at it. You know your work in the valleys will pay off.

So enjoy the challenge, and await the mountains.
                                                                                                                                       

Hey, thanks for reading. This post was inspired by this Zen Pencils comic and a conversation with a good friend. Sorry if this post isn’t as good as the others, but the idea of enjoying the process felt like it was an idea worth sharing (and TED hasn’t asked me to do a talk yet). Besides that, I have 2-3 other posts that went unpublished and I didn’t want to make a habit out of it. Anyway, constructive criticism appreciated. 

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