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Nathan Wiens, creator of Practical Mastery, on how mastery actually develops. Crafts, martial traditions, apprenticeships — the systems that historically produced real capability ran on structure, constraint, evaluation, and progressive responsibility, not on motivation and mindset. We talk about why most behavior-change fails, the difference between insight and change, constraint as a stabilizing mechanism, and how to approach mastery as a long-term developmental project.
By Moritz BierlingNathan Wiens, creator of Practical Mastery, on how mastery actually develops. Crafts, martial traditions, apprenticeships — the systems that historically produced real capability ran on structure, constraint, evaluation, and progressive responsibility, not on motivation and mindset. We talk about why most behavior-change fails, the difference between insight and change, constraint as a stabilizing mechanism, and how to approach mastery as a long-term developmental project.