Warren Buffett's business partner, Charlie Munger, told an audience that their edges included investing time in good ideas and avoiding stupidity (1).
"Share something great" (2)
Share a story, recipe, poem, whatever. Sahil Bloom discusses the importance of "The Empty Cup" - a.k.a. Beginner's Mind (3).
Be curious. Be open. (4)
If responsible to conduct practice and allowed only three activities, what would they be and why?
Add something to your game (5)
What would it be and how would you do it? Add more topspin. Improve your tip game or setter dumps.
Exploit analogy (6)
How does something unrelated connect to another concept?
Think Again
Adam Grant's book "Think Again," comes to mind. Keep a "Rethinking Scorecard" (7) where you track how ideas or events changed your mind.
Lead by example. Grant suggests keeping a "Leadership Scorecard" (8) to track how you responded to leadership opportunities.
Keep Score
Why the numbers? Washington Post investigative journalist Bob Woodward shared a principle of his writing. Every column should inform the reader of at least six concepts (9) or issues. Even better, pull "actionable ideas" from the column (10).
Lagniappe. Bill Belichick was asked about being called "a genius." He explained that during his coaching career he'd been called "an idiot" plenty.
“You can’t let praise or criticism get to you, It's a weakness to get caught up in either one.” - John Wooden pic.twitter.com/5QPiQPQwv0
— Hoop Herald (@TheHoopHerald) February 18, 2026
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