Speeding up and perfection are illusions; essentially, they are both surrender.
What truly matters? Keep going. The hardest part is getting started, so the first step isn't about pursuing perfection but about raising the baseline of your actions on days when your energy or mood is low. Some days, if you're not feeling your best, don't demand 100% from yourself—60% is okay, as long as you don't stop.
This idea has been repeatedly emphasized by the author of Atomic Habits, and he reiterated it on the Huberman podcast. Why is he so persistent? Because this is the core secret of the habit system.
The era of LLM has arrived, and this principle has become even more impactful. Everyone is researching prompts, optimizing workflows, and seeking perfect AI workflows—but 99% of people are stuck at "haven't started yet." Those who are truly making money have already been iterating continuously, even if their methods are not perfect; their feedback loops have run a thousand times.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
7 Likes
Reward
7
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
StableBoi
· 1h ago
Running faster than those who have perfected their research in 60 minutes—that's the truth.
If you don't start, you'll never have a feedback loop. So what's there to optimize?
People who started early have already iterated a thousand times. It's truly speechless.
Stopping means surrendering. I believe in that.
View OriginalReply0
rekt_but_resilient
· 01-08 06:51
Make a move in 60 minutes; it's more profitable than the perfect plan.
View OriginalReply0
Blockwatcher9000
· 01-08 06:49
The saying "60 minutes is also fine" is brilliant... I previously stubbornly stuck to the perfect plan, but ended up accomplishing nothing. Now, just get started, feedback loop is the most important.
View OriginalReply0
ser_ngmi
· 01-08 06:47
60 minutes is fine, I love this statement. It's much better than those motivational "坚持梦想" (坚持梦想) speeches.
The real winners are the ones who started early, not the perfectionists.
In the LLM track, those still struggling with prompts are just wasting time.
This is a competition of execution, not creativity.
People stuck at "haven't started yet" really should reflect on themselves.
View OriginalReply0
GateUser-e51e87c7
· 01-08 06:47
Start right away in 60 minutes, don't wait for the perfect day.
Speeding up and perfection are illusions; essentially, they are both surrender.
What truly matters? Keep going. The hardest part is getting started, so the first step isn't about pursuing perfection but about raising the baseline of your actions on days when your energy or mood is low. Some days, if you're not feeling your best, don't demand 100% from yourself—60% is okay, as long as you don't stop.
This idea has been repeatedly emphasized by the author of Atomic Habits, and he reiterated it on the Huberman podcast. Why is he so persistent? Because this is the core secret of the habit system.
The era of LLM has arrived, and this principle has become even more impactful. Everyone is researching prompts, optimizing workflows, and seeking perfect AI workflows—but 99% of people are stuck at "haven't started yet." Those who are truly making money have already been iterating continuously, even if their methods are not perfect; their feedback loops have run a thousand times.