Sketch 94 -

Keep your previous versions. Seeing the evolution from Sketch 1 to Sketch 94 provides the confidence boost needed to keep going.

Shift your pride from the result to the repetition . Being the person who showed up 94 times is a victory in itself. Conclusion Sketch 94

Don't wait for a "big idea." Start sketching, even if the first 50 versions are mediocre. Keep your previous versions

"Sketch 94" is the embodiment of that quantity group. It is the result of 93 previous "failures" that provided the roadmap to success. Practical Application How do we apply the "Sketch 94" mindset to our daily lives? Being the person who showed up 94 times

Most people quit at Sketch 5 or 10. They encounter the "messy middle," where the initial excitement has faded, but the final polish is nowhere in sight. Reaching Sketch 94 requires a transition from (working hard for one day) to consistency (working steadily for months). This volume of work builds "muscle memory." Whether it’s the way a charcoal pencil hits the paper or how a line of code interacts with a database, the 94th iteration represents a level of intimacy with the craft that a beginner simply cannot access. The Lesson of the Pottery Class

There is a famous anecdote about a pottery teacher who divided his class into two groups. One group was graded solely on the of a single pot; the other was graded on the quantity of pots made (the total weight of their work). By the end of the semester, the highest-quality pots actually came from the "quantity" group. While the "quality" group sat around theorizing about perfection, the "quantity" group was busy making mistakes, learning from them, and inadvertently perfecting their technique through sheer volume.

"Sketch 94" isn't just a label on a file or a drawing; it is a testament to resilience. It reminds us that mastery is a marathon, not a sprint. The next time you feel stuck or frustrated by a project, remember that you aren't failing—you’re just on Sketch 12. Keep going until you hit 94, and you’ll be amazed at what you’ve built along the way.