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A dude asked me this question: “Successful entrepreneurs are always telling me to move fast. Execute fast. Be aggressive. But then they also say don’t rush, don’t be reckless, be patient, don’t make stupid mistakes. How can both be true?”
You don’t really understand it from the outside, but only after you’ve actually done this long enough to screw things up a few times and learn the hard way. But think of it this way:
I’m part Italian. There are Italian dishes that are amazing, but they’re not simple. They require precision, experience, and patience. Take something like al risotto or lasagna al ragu. You don’t just throw it together and hope for the best.
So, if we had a dinner party and realized last minute we needed to make one of those dishes fast, my dad could do it quickly. Not because he’s rushing, but because he’s experienced. He knows exactly what matters and what doesn’t. He has the muscle memory. He can move fast on the parts that won’t screw anything up.
But even he can’t rush certain things. Once it’s in the pan or the oven, the heat has to do what the heat does. Time has to pass. You can’t bully it into being ready.
Now imagine me cooking. I can’t move as fast. I have to slow everything down. I have to be intentional. Because if I rush the wrong step, I ruin the whole thing. And that’s the lesson.
Some things can be done fast without consequences. Grabbing ingredients. Measuring salt. Lining things up. Those are execution tasks. Move fast. Other things require skill and judgment. Cutting. Timing.
Balance. Those you slow down for until you know what you’re doing. And then there’s the final category. The part where you’ve done everything you can do correctly, and now you wait. You cannot rush it. Period.
Life works the same way. Move fast on the menial stuff, like responding to email. Slow down on the things that require skill, like correcting a teammate. And accept that some outcomes just take time no matter how good you are.
The more time you spend in the kitchen, the faster you get where it makes sense. And the better you get at knowing where patience isn’t optional. That’s not a contradiction. That’s experience.







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