Knowledge Compounds — Small Daily Efforts Create Enormous Returns
People dramatically underestimate the power of consistent, modest effort over time. Thirty minutes a day doesn't sound like much, but over a year that's 180 hours — the equivalent of more than four full work weeks of focused study. Knowledge, like compound interest, builds on itself: what you learn today makes tomorrow's learning faster and easier. Each new concept connects to existing ones, and the web of connections grows exponentially, not linearly.
This is why weekend marathons can't compete with daily habits. Cramming 10 hours on a Saturday gives you a burst, but it doesn't compound — by Monday, most of it has faded. The person who studies 30 minutes a day, every day, for two years will outperform the person who does intensive weekends by a staggering margin. The secret isn't intensity — it's consistency. Small deposits, made reliably, create wealth that one-time efforts never will.
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