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Episode Theme:
Why reaching a milestone often means the real work is just beginning.
Key Topics:
A childhood hike and the illusion of the summit
The first crest vs. the real mountain
AI tools and the promise of easy progress
Why automation doesn’t remove responsibility
The meaning of “chop wood, carry water”
How tools change but effort remains
The danger of mistaking progress for completion
Learning to recognize new stages of the climb
Showing up after the excitement fades
Seeing clearly once you know what lies ahead
Notable Takeaways:
What feels like the top is often only the start.
New tools don’t replace the need for work.
Progress changes the view, not the requirement to climb.
Discipline matters after success as much as before.
The mountain is always still there.
Suggested Reflections:
Where have you mistaken a milestone for a finish line?
What “new mountain” are you facing right now?
How has new technology changed your tools but not your effort?
What does “chop wood, carry water” look like in your current work?
Memorable Line (Paraphrase):
“The tools change, the hill gets climbed, but the mountain is still there.”
By Guy ReamsEpisode Theme:
Why reaching a milestone often means the real work is just beginning.
Key Topics:
A childhood hike and the illusion of the summit
The first crest vs. the real mountain
AI tools and the promise of easy progress
Why automation doesn’t remove responsibility
The meaning of “chop wood, carry water”
How tools change but effort remains
The danger of mistaking progress for completion
Learning to recognize new stages of the climb
Showing up after the excitement fades
Seeing clearly once you know what lies ahead
Notable Takeaways:
What feels like the top is often only the start.
New tools don’t replace the need for work.
Progress changes the view, not the requirement to climb.
Discipline matters after success as much as before.
The mountain is always still there.
Suggested Reflections:
Where have you mistaken a milestone for a finish line?
What “new mountain” are you facing right now?
How has new technology changed your tools but not your effort?
What does “chop wood, carry water” look like in your current work?
Memorable Line (Paraphrase):
“The tools change, the hill gets climbed, but the mountain is still there.”