We live in a culture that worships ideas, but I’m frequently left stewing in my ideas and getting nothing done. If knowledge is power — and if ideas are supremely important — why do we have so many educated people with brilliant ideas who achieve little or nothing? For me, that’s been a painful question at times.
I grew up with a supreme confidence in ideas — and a supreme confidence in my own ideas. Actual execution was an afterthought for me. When you’re young and nobody expects that much out of you, just a halfway decent execution of your ideas is almost always enough to impress people — and doing that made me happy.
As I got older, though, a funny thing happened. In the adult world, execution matters more than ideas. In so many of the things I did as a child and as a teen-ager, the good idea was enough to carry the day. Teachers and other adults were impressed. “He’s going to do great things one day,” they’d say.
Looking back, I see that the times when I accomplished anything with my ideas, it was always when I had a partner who was working closely with me. The pattern was always the same. The ideas and inspiration were mine. The practical incentive to turn the ideas into reality — to actually finish what I started — was in the more practical partner working with me. At the time, I didn’t know why I needed that. I understand now.
In a sane world, everyone would think and act exactly the way I do
Years later, Supreme Court justice apologizes to Susette Kelo, sorta
Rights or choices? It might be time to re-frame the debate
Without meaning, most are blind to rot destroying their own lives
Outer storms will end, but storms in my heart do lasting damage
A year later, my father’s death looms large, but I have no regrets
Next, this city is going to be selling lemonade and holding bake sales
If you’re waiting to be rescued, what are you still waiting for?
If you care about education — not just schooling — please read this paper right now