Volleyball is a thinking person's game. Top players track development of:
- Skill (technique)
- Strategy (tactics, volleyball IQ)
- Physicality (strength, quickness, endurance)
- Psychology (resilience, emotional control)
What belongs?
- It's YOUR journal. You curate what resonates for you.
- Quotes
- Tips
- Articles
- Video links (personal and other)
- Philosophy
1. Process beats product
Don’t just share the finished masterpiece. Share the work in progress: drafts, notes, failures, revisions, questions. People don’t connect to polish first - they connect to process. Seeing how the sausage is made builds trust and curiosity.
Think: practice clips, whiteboard photos, marginal notes, ugly first drafts.
My take: Jump start your creative and critical imagination.
2. You don’t have to be an expert — just a few steps ahead
Kleon pushes back on impostor syndrome. You don’t need mastery to share value. If you’re learning something today, someone else needs it tomorrow.
Teaching-as-learning is legitimate. Humility + clarity > authority.
My take: "share something great every day." Maybe it's a dog video.
3. Share something small, every day
Consistency matters more than volume. A paragraph, a quote, a sketch, a drill idea. Small daily signals compound into a recognizable voice and body of work.
This is Atomic Habits before Atomic Habits: identity is built by repetition.
My take: Win the grind. Press on.
4. Be generous, not promotional
“Show your work” is not self-marketing. It’s contribution. Credit sources. Link freely. Celebrate others. Make your corner of the internet useful.
Generosity is the flywheel. Attention follows value, not hype.
My take: Make your work championship quality.
5. Build a home base
Social platforms come and go. Algorithms change. Have a place that’s yours - a blog, newsletter, archive - where your work lives and accumulates.
Rent attention, but own your library.
My take: Your thoughts and ideas have value. Write them down.
Big takeaway:
Show Your Work isn’t about visibility. It’s about participation - joining the conversation by letting people see how you think, struggle, revise, and grow.
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