Today I Believe

Learning never stops, and neither should you

The day you decide you have learned enough is the day the work begins to pass you by.

An essay by Dustin Michael Drozd

Every trade, every industry, every craft revises itself faster than the people inside it usually want to admit. Materials change. Codes change. Tools change. Expectations change.

The professional who stopped learning in their thirties is, by their fifties, defending positions they no longer fully understand against people who quietly know more.

Continuous learning is not glamorous. It is mostly a reading habit, a question habit, and the willingness to be the least informed person in a few rooms each year.

It is also the only durable edge available to almost anyone in any field.