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Let's talk about something that quietly holds a lot of people back — something we've been taught to believe for most of our lives: Talent. The idea that some people are just born with "it." The gift. The spark. The thing that makes them exceptional. And if you don't have it? Well… maybe you just weren't meant for this. Let me be clear: That idea is mostly a lie. Not because people don't have natural inclinations or perspectives — they do. But because what we call talent is usually something much more accessible, much more practical, and much more within your control. This episode is about breaking that illusion — and replacing it with something far more empowering.
The Myth of TalentWe've built an entire mythology around the idea that greatness is reserved for a select few — that some people are simply born with abilities the rest of us don't have. But here's what most people don't see: From the outside, confidence and competence can look exactly the same. And from the inside? It often feels like you're just barely holding it together. There was a time in my own career when things were moving fast — faster than I could fully explain. Big investors. Big opportunities. Big rooms with people who had built massive companies. And the whole time, I had one thought running on a loop: "If they could hear what's going on inside my head right now… this meeting would be over." Because I didn't have it all figured out. I didn't have a perfect plan. I didn't have a polished roadmap. I was just… figuring it out as I went. And yet, from the outside, it looked like talent. That's the disconnect.
What Talent Actually IsWhat we call talent is usually this:
Talent is practice with better PR. That's it. It's the willingness to:
That's what creates the gap between where you are and where you want to be. And here's the part most people miss: The gap is usually much smaller than you think.
The Real GapMost people assume they need:
But the real gap? It's reps. More practice. More attempts. More time actually doing the thing. Ask yourself this: What skill can you develop without practice? There isn't one. And yet, so many people sit on the sidelines waiting to feel "ready" — waiting for confirmation that they're talented enough to begin. That confirmation never comes. Because it doesn't exist.
The Question That Actually MattersSo if the question isn't: "Am I talented enough?" Then what is it? Try this instead: "Am I stubborn enough?" Stubborn enough to:
Because that's what separates people who eventually get "labeled" as talented from everyone else. Not natural ability. Relentless continuation.
Why Most People Stay StuckHere's a pattern I see all the time: Someone says, "I'm not very good at this." So I ask: "Show me your work." And most of the time? There's nothing to show. No reps. No attempts. No messy drafts or early versions. Just an idea of what they might be bad at. That's not a talent problem. That's a practice problem.
What To Do This WeekIf you take one thing from this episode, let it be this: You don't need to prove anything to anyone else. You just need to prove something to yourself. So here's a simple challenge:
Not to impress anyone. Not to publish. Not to be perfect. Just to build momentum. Because momentum is what turns effort into skill — and skill into what the world calls "talent."
Timecodes (So You Can Jump to What You Need)If you've been waiting for a sign that you're "good enough" to start — this is it. Not because you're already great. But because greatness isn't a prerequisite. It's a byproduct. Of reps. Of practice. Of showing up again and again. You are talented enough. The real question is: Will you do the work? Because if you will — consistently, imperfectly, stubbornly — Everything else takes care of itself. Until next time: get your reps in, trust the process, and remember — talent isn't the gate. Practice is.
By Chase Jarvis4.8
570570 ratings
Let's talk about something that quietly holds a lot of people back — something we've been taught to believe for most of our lives: Talent. The idea that some people are just born with "it." The gift. The spark. The thing that makes them exceptional. And if you don't have it? Well… maybe you just weren't meant for this. Let me be clear: That idea is mostly a lie. Not because people don't have natural inclinations or perspectives — they do. But because what we call talent is usually something much more accessible, much more practical, and much more within your control. This episode is about breaking that illusion — and replacing it with something far more empowering.
The Myth of TalentWe've built an entire mythology around the idea that greatness is reserved for a select few — that some people are simply born with abilities the rest of us don't have. But here's what most people don't see: From the outside, confidence and competence can look exactly the same. And from the inside? It often feels like you're just barely holding it together. There was a time in my own career when things were moving fast — faster than I could fully explain. Big investors. Big opportunities. Big rooms with people who had built massive companies. And the whole time, I had one thought running on a loop: "If they could hear what's going on inside my head right now… this meeting would be over." Because I didn't have it all figured out. I didn't have a perfect plan. I didn't have a polished roadmap. I was just… figuring it out as I went. And yet, from the outside, it looked like talent. That's the disconnect.
What Talent Actually IsWhat we call talent is usually this:
Talent is practice with better PR. That's it. It's the willingness to:
That's what creates the gap between where you are and where you want to be. And here's the part most people miss: The gap is usually much smaller than you think.
The Real GapMost people assume they need:
But the real gap? It's reps. More practice. More attempts. More time actually doing the thing. Ask yourself this: What skill can you develop without practice? There isn't one. And yet, so many people sit on the sidelines waiting to feel "ready" — waiting for confirmation that they're talented enough to begin. That confirmation never comes. Because it doesn't exist.
The Question That Actually MattersSo if the question isn't: "Am I talented enough?" Then what is it? Try this instead: "Am I stubborn enough?" Stubborn enough to:
Because that's what separates people who eventually get "labeled" as talented from everyone else. Not natural ability. Relentless continuation.
Why Most People Stay StuckHere's a pattern I see all the time: Someone says, "I'm not very good at this." So I ask: "Show me your work." And most of the time? There's nothing to show. No reps. No attempts. No messy drafts or early versions. Just an idea of what they might be bad at. That's not a talent problem. That's a practice problem.
What To Do This WeekIf you take one thing from this episode, let it be this: You don't need to prove anything to anyone else. You just need to prove something to yourself. So here's a simple challenge:
Not to impress anyone. Not to publish. Not to be perfect. Just to build momentum. Because momentum is what turns effort into skill — and skill into what the world calls "talent."
Timecodes (So You Can Jump to What You Need)If you've been waiting for a sign that you're "good enough" to start — this is it. Not because you're already great. But because greatness isn't a prerequisite. It's a byproduct. Of reps. Of practice. Of showing up again and again. You are talented enough. The real question is: Will you do the work? Because if you will — consistently, imperfectly, stubbornly — Everything else takes care of itself. Until next time: get your reps in, trust the process, and remember — talent isn't the gate. Practice is.

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