March 30, 2013 โ Why does it take 10,000 hours to become a master of something, and not 1,000 hours or 100,000 hours?
The answer is simple. Once you've spent 10,000 hours practicing something, no one can crush you like a bug.
Nature loves inequality. For example, humans are 1,000x bigger than bugs.
It is very easy for a human to squash a bug.
When you are starting to learn something and have spent say, 100 hours practicing that thing, you, my friend, are the bug.
There are many people out there who have been practicing that thing for 10,000 hours, and can easily crush you like a bug (if they are mean spirited like that ;) ).
Once you've got 1,000 hours of practice under your belt, it becomes hard for someone to easily crush you.
You reach 10,000 hours of practice, and you are now at a level where no one can crush you like a bug.
You can put up a fight against anyone.
It is near impossible for a human to practice something for 100,000 hours.
That would be 40 hours of practice per week for fifty years!
Life is too chaotic, and our bodies are too fragile, to hit that level of practice.
Thus, when you hit 10,000 hours, you're at "mastery level".
Almost no one one in the world will know 10x more than you.[1]
Do you hear them talking of genius, Degna? There is no such thing. Genius, if you like to call it that, is the gift of work continuously applied. That's all it is, as I have proved for myself. @ Guglielmo Marconi
[1] Perhaps to be one of the greatest of all time, you have to both be constantly practicing and have exceptional luck to live a healthy long live.