The Traps of Being a Knowledge Chaser

Imhotep

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Anyone on BGOL would have noticed the seemly endless threads on various topics and subject matter. Here a very interesting article on people who are know as "Knowledge Chasers. The 21st century version of a hunter/gatherer— except that instead of spending the day going from tree to tree picking fruit to feed their stomach, their going from web page to web page to feed their mind."

Consider is that chasing knowledge focuses my time and energy on accumulating more and more information instead of dealing with the information I already have. Two fundamental facts of reality come into play here. The first is that I only have 24 hours in a day. Every hour I spend chasing knowledge robs me of an hour I could have used elsewhere. The second fact is that knowledge acquired does me no good unless I act on it, and acting on it takes time and effort.

Which brings me to the second trap: knowledge chasing inclines me to define success in terms of quantity of things learned rather than quality of a soul changed. We all realize that mere accumulation of knowledge can’t be an end unto itself, but it’s easy to lose sight of that truth. Always has been. I’m reminded of what the Apostle James wrote two thousand years ago: “But be doers of the word, and not hearers only, deceiving yourselves.”

Speaking of self-deception, here’s the next trap to consider: knowledge chasing can be the excuse I use to avoid the hard choices. It’s easier to read a book on how to be a good husband than to have that hard conversation with your wife. It’s easier to check the latest blog on personal finance than to cut up my credit card. And it’s certainly a lot easier to bookmark that article on nine ways to develop killer abs than to actually get up early and sweat. But I can avoid all those hard choices if I convince myself that I’m learning something new and valuable. Ouch.

Lastly, I think constantly chasing knowledge can encourage a “lottery” mentality of personal growth. The trap plays out like this: if I just read this new book on self-discipline or listen to this author’s lecture on joyful living maybe I’ll get lucky and find that simple key that will solve all my troubles. If I keep learning surely I’ll one day stumble onto that one special truth that will revolutionize my life. It’s a variation on the lottery mentality— instead of spending all our money on lottery tickets hoping for that one big payoff, we spend all our time on learning hoping for that one big payoff. Of course, real growth, financial or personal, doesn’t come from a lottery, but from investing what we already have (or know) coupled with disciplined daily work.

Do you want a successful life? Don’t fall into the trap of simply chasing knowledge, but instead strive for a consistent lifestyle of applying what you learn. Don’t know how to start? Then pick something you’ve learned that demands change in your life, and focus on it and it alone this week. Think about how that knowledge needs to play out in your life, draw up some action points, talk to someone about it, and follow through. Don’t move to the next project or the next book until you can honestly say to yourself that you have mastered the life change that you set yourself to.

Enjoy..........
http://www.lightalongthejourney.com/?p=693
 
Yeah man, excellent work, the truth hurts but it's also very helpful to those who want to hear it.
 
Being a knowledge chaser has definitely been a big problem for me. One of the habits I'm trying to cultivate is not to start looking for new info unless it is something that I can act on IMMEDIATELY.
 
im guilty of this as well...

its only really a problem if you're obsessed with it, and your pursuit for finding more is really just an excuse to NOT ACT on it
(take business for example....reading about it, learning more, and planning out what your going to do is great...but you gotta act on it) so you've got to find that zone in which you ACTIONS:KNOWLEDGE ratio is just over 1 on whatever you're learning.

And as for the article...living in reality, doing things step by step is great as well...but you've got no idea where you're going
...always increasing your knowledge gives you direction and focus on the goals you want to achieve.
 
Excellent read. You can have all the knowledge in the world, but if u don't apply it, it means nothing. Thanks fam.
 
Yeah that just smacked me in the face! In 09 I'm gonna focus on ACTION
and making some real changes then soak up more knowledge AFTER I've used what I know NOW when I'm on a higher level.
 
Yes, I have a very big concern about this.

I gather a lot of tutorials, and some with the intent of storying it for when I need it because I know I can't use it right away. This is doubles the danger of just be a hoarder, which I do.

Moreso, so of the knowledge I gather, has become extinct right before my very eyes. So then it's clutter but as the article says, about the lottery mentality, I don't trash it because I think it may contain that one key bit of info that might be a breakthough.

Again, I also use working infront of the computer as a way of not dealing with real world work, fixing a roof, or cleaning out a room.

Then there's so many area that I have gathered knowledge on it become an overwhelming where to start to apply.

Great article. Still, the knowledge that I have gain, a small about has been like a highly concentrated upgrade of improvement. So eventhough percentage wise, I am not applying as much as I gain, what I do apply is a significant gain.

Also, I believe to truly understand a problem you have to look at it in more than one angle so I often gain more info on one topic, but true to form, I do have a better and more thorough understanding than if I did only have one source.

After reading I know I can't just do one thing because my working is multidisciplinary, but I believe picking one or two things and seeing those through as primary high priority projects is helpful and then having a few lower priority would be workable.
 
I'm reading this book right now called The Millionaire Fastlane. Speaks exactly about this.

We read tons of knowledge on how to do this, how to do that and NEVER do the most important act of all that knowledge, EXECUTE it.

It's how most money making businesses prey on people cause they KNOW people never execute shit. They read and never apply a course they buy or network marketing opportunity. They read or join and boom - NOTHING
 
This makes perfect sense and I'm guilty as described. Time to narrow some shit down. I have over 20 tabs open right now.
 
This is funny. I have about 15 tabs open now and usually on a daily basis. LoL I'm condensing them.

Mannnn. I brought it down to 17 and am trying to bring them down some more by the end of today. It's just that 1 link leads to another, and another...:smh::smh:
 
Mannnn. I brought it down to 17 and am trying to bring them down some more by the end of today. It's just that 1 link leads to another, and another...:smh::smh:

We got the same problem. What's sad is when I open my firefox browser 10 plus pages pop up because I saved them. I'm slowly but surely working on this problem.
 
Thank you for this post! I've read it several times and have come to the realization that I was a knowledge chaser. I've done so much reading on starting a successful business that I decided to finally close the books and browsers and actually apply the knowledge. Thanks again.
 
I was doing good, and now I'm back to about the same amount :smh::angry:

It's hard to break the habit. You should read this book called the "Power of Less". It's about break habits and organizing stuff. It's a great short read. Check it out on Amazon.com
 
It's hard to break the habit. You should read this book called the "Power of Less". It's about break habits and organizing stuff. It's a great short read. Check it out on Amazon.com

Thanks. I'll cram it in before my other 3 books...I know, I know.
 
Good read and I am guilty. However, I do apply a lot learned in order to maintain what is around me. I've used the internet to learn everything from how to service my own car, repair my own computer, fix household fixtures and appliances and improve my knowledge base for work.

The downside is that I haven't used any in order to create a way of becoming financially independent. Food for thought.
 
Excellent and timely. This is me. I love to learn (and there's nothing wrong with that) but one of my mentors told me to travel "deeper" into my studies rather than wider (i.e. getting all scattered with feeling like I had to know MORE to be effective when I barely scratched the surface of the things I already learned. Real knowledge has a lot of layers. It's not just what you learned (that's like an outline really), but have you experienced, have you acted, have you developed an understanding that often times transcends what you learned in the first place? Getting to those deep levels takes discipline and time. A friend and I had this discussion recently about gardening for example.We both agreed that you can have 1000 books on the subject, but the only way to really know what works for your yard is trial and error (acting). Things the books said I couldn't grow, grew and shit that was listed as easy shriveled and died so yeah that's experience!

After this month I'm going to put a moratorium on book buying that isn't for sheer entertainment purposes.
 
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