So the first thing you got to do, to start learning a skill is to deconstruct that same skill. So you're going to break your specific skill in small, tangible goals. And you can definitely do this by starting backwards by reversing the engineer of the thing. So let's so let's imagine you want to play guitar, if you look to someone was playing guitar, he does a ton of steps that will produce the music that he's playing, like learning how to change chords, learning the chords, learning how to change them quickly. They know how to play a specific rhythm. They also in the backstage, I mean, they they know how to tune their guitar, how to change their strings.
There's a lot of things that behind the scenes, I guess, between playing guitar or any other skill, and what I'm going to show you is how I can break a specific skill in a small tangible goal. So you can see And see how I do it. So then you can replicate the same strategy with a specific skill you want to learn. And you can apply this strategy to any skill you want. And those skills can be more practical skills like playing guitar, learning how to skateboard I'm learning let me how to play drums or anything like that those are more practical skills because they require more practice, but you can also apply this this method to skills that are a little bit more theoretical, that require more study, in theory, like for example learning economics, learning, marketing, learning any language of course, they also require some practice, but they are also a lot based on theory in on the learning process that is more focused on memorizing and understanding as specific things