Slow progress isn’t stagnation. It’s the normal rhythm of most real learning, made of plateaus, stretches without visible change, and leaps that arrive when you stop expecting them.
Discouragement rarely comes from the absence of progress. It comes from how we measure that progress: comparing ourselves to a distant ideal rather than our starting point.
Why slow progress discourages
We expect linear progression
We imagine progress as a straight, regular line. Reality looks more like a staircase: long plateaus without visible change, then a step crossed all at once. During the plateau, we wrongly believe we’re no longer advancing.
We compare ourselves to the wrong point
Measuring yourself against a very advanced model, or an ideal version of yourself, makes any progress seem insignificant. The gap looks immense, and the real progress, invisible.
Mastery is a direction, not a race
In my framework, mastery, the third pillar, is continuous improvement, without perfectionism. It’s a movement, not a finish line. Seen this way, slowness isn’t failure: it’s the normal form of deep progress.
Fast learning is often superficial. What lasts comes slowly.
How not to lose heart
1. Track the traveled distance
Keep a record of what you’ve learned. The path appears more clearly recorded than in memory.
2. Compare with your past, not the ideal
Comparing yourself with a perfect model or a similar version of yourself makes any progress seem trivial.
3. Accept the plateaus
No sign of stopping. Long plateaus precede clear steps.
What’s next?
Slow progress doesn’t weaken mastery, the third pillar. It strengthens it.
Next step: Read the Method
Frequently Asked Questions
Must progress be linear?
No. Reality is closer to a staircase, with intermittent leaps.
What if I started and then stalled?
Accept whether the real cause is the work itself or not the project. You might need a break, not a system.
How do I start when everything feels stuck?
Choose just one. Any beginning frees the mind more than staying in thought.



