※ 본 글에는 제휴 링크가 포함되어 있습니다. 이 링크를 통해 구매 시, 작성자는 일정 수수료를 받을 수 있습니다.
한국어
Music doesn’t need a perfect setup. Give it twenty honest minutes, one tiny action, and a single line of notes. You’ll feel the difference.

정말 효과 있는 방법
- One tiny action a day is a surprisingly fast pace over a month.
- Make starting easy and slightly boring—consistency loves boring.
- Leave breadcrumbs for tomorrow: a prepped file, a short note, one next step.
Mix Flow
Default to ‘done, not perfect’ and you’ll oddly get better faster. Here’s a quick way in:
- Define one tiny action for today.
- Do it in the same context (time/place).
- Write one sentence about what worked.
Use Playlists To Learn
Default to ‘done, not perfect’ and you’ll oddly get better faster. Try this:
- Pick one tool and ignore the rest for a week.
- Focus on signal: one skill, one metric.
- Review weekly, adjust lightly.
Find Deep Cuts
Track one concrete win—it’s fuel for the next day. Try this:
- Pick one tool and ignore the rest for a week.
- Focus on signal: one skill, one metric.
- Review weekly, adjust lightly.
Common mistakes
- Collecting tips instead of touching the work.
- Switching tools weekly and resetting your habits.
- Overplanning so much that you avoid starting.
A tiny example
Set a 20-minute timer. Pick one line from above. Do only that. End with one sentence: what moved the needle? That’s your flywheel.
TL;DR
Small action + daily note + weekly tweak. If it feels heavy, shrink the plan.
Tip: keep it simple on purpose. Tomorrow’s start should feel obvious.
English

정말 효과 있는 방법
- One tiny action a day is a surprisingly fast pace over a month.
- Make starting easy and slightly boring—consistency loves boring.
- Leave breadcrumbs for tomorrow: a prepped file, a short note, one next step.
Mix Flow
- Define one tiny action for today.
- Do it in the same context (time/place).
- Write one sentence about what worked.
Use Playlists To Learn
- Pick one tool and ignore the rest for a week.
- Focus on signal: one skill, one metric.
- Review weekly, adjust lightly.
Find Deep Cuts
- Pick one tool and ignore the rest for a week.
- Focus on signal: one skill, one metric.
- Review weekly, adjust lightly.
Common mistakes
- Collecting tips instead of touching the work.
- Switching tools weekly and resetting your habits.
- Overplanning so much that you avoid starting.
