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MM 46 - Level Up or Stay Stuck

A Monday Motivation on Growth, Teaching, and Actually Getting Better

NOTE: I uploaded the wrong video initially as I had everything in one folder in my effort to clean up and be efficient. This is what I get for being cleaned up and efficient.

It’s April.

Let that sit for a second.

We’re not easing into the year anymore—we’re deep in it. A third of it is gone. Time doesn’t slow down; it just keeps moving, whether you’re ready or not. And if you’ve been feeling like you’re grinding but not really moving forward, this one’s for you.

Because something’s been on my mind lately—through conversations with other teachers, artists, and just life in general:

We’re all operating at different levels.

Like a game. Like D&D. Like anything worth doing.

There’s:

  • The beginner — learning, struggling, figuring it out

  • The journeyman — practicing, experimenting, pushing forward

  • The master — skilled, experienced, refined

But here’s the part people don’t always talk about:

Masters don’t just do the work—they teach it.


The Growth Loop

When you teach someone—even someone just starting out—you’re forced to go back to the basics. You have to explain things you normally do on instinct.

And that does something powerful.

It creates a loop:

  • You learn

  • You practice

  • You teach

  • You relearn

And suddenly, things click in a deeper way.

So if you feel stuck, if you feel like you’re not leveling up?

Go help someone.

Show them what you know. Walk them through your process. Even just explaining your thinking can unlock something in your own work.


Practice Alone Isn’t Enough

We hear it all the time: “Just keep practicing.”

But here’s the truth—practice without awareness can trap you.

If you’re repeating the same mistake over and over, you’re not improving. You’re just reinforcing bad habits.

Growth requires:

  • Reflection

  • Adjustment

  • Intent

Sometimes the best thing you can do is stop and actually look at your work.

Lay it out. Study it. Be honest.

Ask yourself:

  • Where did I succeed?

  • Where did I fall short?

  • Why did something work?

That last one matters the most.

Because once you understand why something works, you can do it again—and better.


Clarity Over Complexity

Especially in creative work, there’s a temptation to overdo everything.

You think:
“This needs to be bigger, more detailed, more impressive.”

But sometimes?

It just needs to be clear.

A simple moment—two figures in shadow, a quiet exchange—can hit harder than the most detailed, overworked scene.

Clarity beats complexity.

Every time.


Growth Feels Like Friction

If you’re looking back at your old work and thinking:

“Damn… this could be better…”

That’s a good sign.

That means you’ve grown.

Yeah, it’s frustrating. It might mean going back and fixing things, redrawing, rewriting, or even scrapping entire ideas.

But that voice in your head—the one telling you something isn’t right?

That’s not failure. That’s progress.

Listen to it.


This Week’s Focus

So here’s your push for the week:

  • If you feel stuck → teach someone

  • If you’re grinding → check if you’re improving, not repeating

  • If things feel too complex → simplify

  • If you’re frustrated → good, that means you’re growing


One Sentence Wisdom

You don’t level up by doing more—you level up by doing better.

One Small Action

Take one piece of your work today and analyze it—find one thing to improve.

One Permission Slip

You’re allowed to outgrow your old work—even if it means changing it.


Now get after it.

Be sharper. Be better.

And most of all—

be good.

FWACATA’s podcast and comics are a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.

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