I recently learned about something in the brain. It is when things are procedural or too easy we lose out in the long-term. I thought the title "Too Easy" was very apt. I thought of another post I had written back in a few months ago and later came to learn I had coincidentally named it "Hard".
In it, I recalled something Moula tells us. There is a lot of sawab in doing wazu with cold water at fajr. Back in when I wrote the post, another layer became clear to me. There's a lot of benefit in doing the hard thing.
No surprise that some research confirms what Moula's wisdom is telling us. It is specific, but at the same time the thought can be broadened.
I'm learning about Block Learning vs Interleaving. In short, block learning is doing something over and over using the same method or learning by procedure. Think formula. Things work only if something fits the formula. This is true when learning a math equation or practicing chess all day or very specific or narrow domain knowledge. This leads to wins and observable progress in the short-term. It comes at the expense of the long-term though. The opposite is interleaving. Think concepts. This is frustrating and often leads to frustration and lack of observable results. This is stickier. This kind of learning is harder, but objectively better. This is strongly correlated with learning to do lots of things; it is related to gaining knowledge in multiple domains. Most of the best athletes, musicians, other artists, and academics practice this kind of learning.
There's a lesson here. Whether it's parenting, sabaq, hosting, school, work, or any of many other things, we might not be able see the payoff, but it's there. That's maybe the point too. We often can't see and just have to trust.
Taher, do the hard thing.
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