John Artman (@knowsnothing) 's Twitter Profile
John Artman

@knowsnothing

Editorial analytics, operations and strategy @SCMPNews

Formerly editor-in-chief @technodechina

ID: 47917094

calendar_today17-06-2009 10:18:54

17,17K Tweet

3,3K Followers

1,1K Following

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1️⃣ What if everything you’ve been taught about personal growth is setting you up to fail? Maybe powering through isn’t the answer. Maybe gentleness—not discipline—is the real key to sustainable progress. 🧵👇

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2️⃣ Over the last month, I kept getting stuck in the classic cycle: excitement → big plans → frustration → giving up. Reflecting on this, I realized I needed a new set of core principles for meaningful change.

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3️⃣ Principle 1: Be Gentle Instead of shaming yourself for setbacks, treat them as data—not failures. Gentleness isn’t letting yourself off the hook; it’s compassionate curiosity. That’s what makes consistent growth possible.

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Your brain is only half-baked when you're born. It doesn't fully mature until your twenties—and even then, it never stops changing.

John Artman (@knowsnothing) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Humans are the most unique animal on this planet. We come out with brains that are “half-baked”—not fully maturing until our twenties. Even after that? Study after study shows our brains keep changing as they adapt to new environments, people, skills, and information.

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Your brain: 86 billion neurons forming trillions of connections. Always seeking efficiency—the more neurons communicate, the easier and faster it becomes. This is why practice makes permanent, not just perfect.

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Quick question: When did you last learn something that felt impossible at first? That uncomfortable feeling? That’s your brain literally rewiring itself. Most people avoid discomfort. Smart people lean into it.