If you want to know how, look up Dunning Krueger. The delusion that one is good trumps the reality of being good.
You want to balance on the tip of thinking that you're just good enough to make effort pay off. Then figure out how to improve. That means balancing yourself on the low end of good, I think. Then look for feedback not on whether you're good or not--so long as it's not surgery and you're not hurting anybody--but on how you can level up.
First level characters in D&D suck, even though they're better than 90% or more of the people. But they suck against what they can do tomorrow, and that's the right way. Be that hoover or get going!!
The following section applies to this forum item as a whole,
not this individual post.
Any feedback sent through it will go to the forum's
owner, Writing.Com Support.
Printed from https://www.writing.com/main/forums/message_id/3646073
Copyright 2000 - 2024 21 x 20 Media All rights reserved. This site is property of 21 x 20 Media
All Writing.Com images are copyrighted and may not be copied / modified in any way. All other brand names & trademarks are owned by their respective companies.
Generated in 0.21 seconds at 2:56am on May 04, 2024 via server web2.