Wednesday Wisdom #19
Issue 19: Python for Kids, If I Ruled the Tweets, The 100 Hour Asset
Hey everybody đ,
Greetings from Chicago! Itâs been another whirlwind week.
I was talking with the other Write of Passage Alumni Mentors yesterday and we all noted how behind we feel on our own writing. Weâre creating slides for our individual sessions, staying active on the course forum, giving article feedback, and staying on top of conversations on Twitterâweâre all feeling it. Iâm comforted that itâs a juggling act for all of us, not just me. The support and positivity we see from students in our class has blown away our expectations and thatâs keeping us energized.
On Saturday, I drove to Evanston and met Sid Jha in person for the first time. Sid just graduated from Northwestern but is moving to DC in a few weeks to start a new job.
If you donât already follow his newsletter Sunday Snapshots, you should. His writing focuses on books, technology, and psychology. Heâs someone that inspired me to start writing in February. I continue to look to him for inspiration and guidance in my own quest to find a personal monopoly, solidify a writing habit, and think critically about the things I read. We discovered our backgrounds are similar in that weâre both only children and moved frequently in our childhood.
When I wrote about connecting with people in The Power of Twitter, Sid is the embodiment of the kind of person I want to keep networking with, learning from, and meeting in real life.

In this weekâs newsletter, I discuss:
đ Python for Kids
đŚ If I Ruled the Tweets
â The 100 Hour Asset
âď¸ Comet NEOWISE
đľ Spiky Point of View
and more!
Currently Reading
Python for Kids
Last week, I discussed my 12 Favorite Problemsâthe questions that drive my learning and the filter by which I decide what to spend my productive time on.
Question #5: Whatâs the best way to learn Python to automate parts of my job?
![Python for Kids: A Playful Introduction To Programming by [Jason Briggs] Python for Kids: A Playful Introduction To Programming by [Jason Briggs]](https://substackcdn.com/image/fetch/w_1456,c_limit,f_auto,q_auto:good,fl_progressive:steep/https%3A%2F%2Fbucketeer-e05bbc84-baa3-437e-9518-adb32be77984.s3.amazonaws.com%2Fpublic%2Fimages%2Fae487a50-67db-475c-81af-0db822c010ba_378x500.jpeg)
My friend Zakk Fleishmann wrote a great post about learning to code where he says that programming skills will start to normalize much like Word, Excel, and PowerPoint have over the last 20 years.
So, how should one approach learning to code at a beginner level? Zakk recommends three books. Python for Kids, Python Crash Course, and Automate the Boring Stuff with Python.
I started diving into Python for Kids this week. As Zakk says, donât let the name turn you offâitâs not surface level or too kiddy. So far Iâm exploring calculations and variables, and getting an introduction to strings, lists, tuples, and maps. Iâm excited to keep reading and practicing these lessons and eventually being able to say that I too know how to code.
If I Ruled the Tweets
Packy McCormickâthe writer of one of my favorite newsletters Not Boring, published a terrific article this week about everyoneâs favorite punching bag company, Twitter.
Packy argues that Twitter is the most under-monetized product in the world because it doesnât know what it is, capturing almost none of the value it creates.
Twitter thinks itâs an ad product, but itâs a subscription product. It thinks itâs an Aggregator, but itâs a Platform. It thinks itâs a social network, but itâs a professional network: one built for the Passion Economy, based on the strength of ideas instead of past experience.
That realization should be liberating for Twitter and Jack Dorsey. Instead of being the worldâs least innovative social network, it can be its most innovative professional network. Twitter should be the beating heart of the Passion Economy, and begin capturing some of the tremendous value it creates.
Packy cites some great examples and says that Substack would not exist today in its current form without Twitter. Most newsletter writers grow their subscribers primarily through Twitterâs graph, for which Twitter collects almost no revenue.
If Twitter were to create a product similar to LinkedIn, charging some users for professional and advanced features, it could unlock a revenue opportunity of nearly $1 billion per year quite easily.
My Twitter Profile would be what a LinkedIn Profile would be if it were a living, breathing thing, created in and for 2020, based on what Iâm currently creating and consuming.
Here is Packyâs thread summarizing his ideas:


I hope Jack Dorsey and those in control at the company take these ideas seriously and implement them.
The 100 Hour Asset
Nobody writes short articles better than Seth Godin. Last week he published The 100 Hour Asset which resonated with me immediately.
Main take-aways:
To acquire a valuable new skill, you need to invest ~100 hours.
99% of us are not willing to put in the time or energy to do this. Those who can do it gain something of value that others donât have.
If you invest 20 hours per week for a year (1,000 hours)âyou can master an entirely new category.
Itâs human nature to crave immediate results, so it can be discouraging to invest time in something and not see the payoff right away. It reminded me of a quote from James Clear in Atomic Habits:
âThe ultimate form of intrinsic motivation is when a habit becomes part of your identity. Itâs one thing to say Iâm the type of person who wants this. Itâs something very different to say Iâm the type of person who is this.â
The greatest threat to our success is not failure, itâs boredom.
We jump from one workout to another.
We jump from one diet to another.
We jump from one business idea to another.
âAccess to knowledge isnât nearly as difficult as the desire to learn.â
As Iâm learning how to code or developing a more consistent writing habit, reading habit, or workout habit, I have to constantly remind myself that long-term tangible results will only come from consistency.
Progress > perfection, always.
Comet NEOWISE in Chicago âď¸

Tweet of the Week
I had a chance to meet Wes Kao this week in a breakout room during Write of Passage. Sheâs the former executive director of Seth Godinâs altMBA program and phenomenally smart and personable.

Iâve been following her work for the past few months and it was great getting to talk to her. She gave me some tips on how to improve my websiteâs âStart Hereâ page which I plan on doing this week. I also recommend reading her latest blog post Spiky point of view and following her on Twitter!
Photo of the Week

On Sunday morning, I set a personal best 8:01.1 and came *this* close to breaking 8 minutes for a 2,000m row.
The 2,000m distance in rowing is the standard benchmark fitness test. Itâs a good way to test your bodyâs fitness level and your mind.
Looking at the data belowâI started too quickly and couldnât hold a sub 2:01/500m pace for second and third splits, forcing me to have to work much harder on the last 500m to try and break my desired time.
My strategy for next time is to start at a 2:01/500m and get one second faster with each split. Iâll let you know how it goes!
Until next week,
Lev
If you would love to discuss anything Iâve covered, please reach out to me by replying to this email or sending a direct message on Twitter at @levnaginsky
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