PlayBook🌱
Beginner's Mind Day
Spend a day doing something you've never done before. Pottery, skateboarding, calligraphy. Be terrible at it. That's the point.
€ 10–50
budget
Ignite
pace
De eerste minuten voelen altijd ongemakkelijk. Je handen weten niet hoe ze het penseel moeten vasthouden, je voeten zoeken balans op het skateboard, je vingers worstelen met de klei die eigenlijk heel anders aanvoelt dan verwacht. Het geluid van andere beginners om je heen, dat nerveuze lachen wanneer iets mislukt, maakt de ruimte zachter. Je merkt hoe je schouders langzaam ontspannen.
Ergens tussen de twintigste mislukte poging en het moment dat je stopt met tellen, gebeurt er iets. Je lichaam neemt het over van je hoofd. De lijn wordt ineens recht, het wiel draait precies zoals het hoort, je voet vindt vanzelf de juiste plek. Het duurt maar een paar seconden, maar die seconden voelen als een kleine overwinning op jezelf. Later, met klei onder je nagels of geschaafde knieën, realiseer je je dat dit gevoel de reden is waarom mensen hun hele leven blijven leren.
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by PlayTryBe team
Choose your skill. Something you've never attempted. Not "always wanted to try" , truly never done. Book a class or gather the basic materials.
25Suggestion: If you can't think of anything: pottery, skateboarding, fencing, watercolor painting, or learning three phrases in a language you don't speak.Before you start, notice the resistance. The voice that says "I'm too old," "I'll look stupid," "this isn't my thing." Hear it. Then do it anyway.
Begin. Follow the instructions if there's a teacher. If you're solo, just start. Make the first ugly attempt. The first wonky pot, the first wobbly line, the first fall off the board.
Suggestion: Laugh at yourself. Not in a self-deprecating way , in a delighted way. You're a beginner. Beginners get to be bad.Keep going for at least two hours. Don't quit at the first frustration. The frustration is the learning , your brain is building new pathways. It's supposed to feel hard.
There's a tiny moment , maybe minute forty-five , where your body does something your mind didn't plan. A small success. The clay centers. The board rolls straight. That micro-victory is pure gold.
Take a break. Look at what you've made or done. Don't judge it against experts , judge it against what you knew two hours ago. That gap is your growth.
Try once more. Apply what you learned. Notice how the second attempt is different , not necessarily better, but more informed. You're learning in real time.
Being terrible at something is freedom. No reputation to protect, no standard to meet. I was pure potential, pure effort, pure presence. When was the last time I felt this unguarded?
After, write down three things you learned. Not about the skill , about yourself as a learner. How do you respond to not-knowing? To failure? To small victories?
For anyone copying this
Do as we did
Suggestions
- Choose something physical. Drawing, pottery, a sport, an instrument. Avoid things you can do passively.
- Take a beginner class if available. Being in a room of other beginners is humbling and wonderful.
- Don't research it first. Show up blank. Let the experience teach you, not YouTube.
- Bring a friend who's also never done it. Shared incompetence is bonding.
Variations
Kid teacher
Kid teacher: Ask a child to teach you something they're good at. Video games, cartwheels, drawing Pikachu. Let them be the expert.
- Note: Kid teacher: Ask a child to teach you something they're good at. Video games, cartwheels, drawing Pikachu. Let them be the expert.
Cultural edition
Cultural edition: Try something from a culture you know nothing about. A calligraphy class, a martial art, a traditional cooking style.
- Note: Cultural edition: Try something from a culture you know nothing about. A calligraphy class, a martial art, a traditional cooking style.
Monthly beginner
Monthly beginner: Commit to one new beginner experience per month for six months. Build a practice of not-knowing.
- Note: Monthly beginner: Commit to one new beginner experience per month for six months. Build a practice of not-knowing.