Michael Schmidt · 1981–
For Cooper
What I'd want you to know. And anyone else who finds it useful.
Context
Things figured out. Worth passing on.
These aren't rules. They're patterns I've observed usually after getting them wrong first. Some I learned young. Some took longer. Hopefully they provide you with a head start.
Starting Points
Not Answers, Just Better Places to Begin
Nothing here replaces thinking
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One Day... Or Day One
There are two ways to think about the thing you want to do.
One Day -- someday, when the time is right, when I'm ready, when the circumstances line up. Day One -- I've decided. It starts now, imperfect and incomplete.
One Day is a feeling. Day One is a decision.
You've heard the One Days before. I'm going to get healthy. I'm going to go back to school. I'm going to start that business, write that book, call that person, get serious about my finances, finally learn that thing I've been meaning to learn. You were probably rolling your eyes, and you should have been. You've heard them enough to know how most of them end.
I've lived on both sides of that line, sometimes in the same week.
At 25, I thought about starting martial arts. Too old to begin, I told myself. I'm 45 now. If I'd started then, I'd have twenty years behind me. I don't. I have the thought. And now I'm running the same math forward -- start now, ten years by 55. I know the logic. I've known it the whole time. Knowing it and moving on it are not the same thing.
This site didn't start with a plan. It started with paper -- old paper, typed on a machine built before my father was born. I scanned it. Ran OCR on it. Transcribed it into HTML by hand. One thing led to another. The Reflections page. The recordings. The artifacts. The quotes. The homelab. The deck. The transformation photos. None of it was designed up front. It grew because I kept going.
That's the version of me I want you to know.
But I also want to be honest about the other version.
I have a OneNote full of gym commercial ideas and half-written voiceover scripts. I have stubs on this very site I've been meaning to fill in for longer than I want to admit. I have playlists built around videos I haven't written yet. I have a documentary project fully formed in my head -- multiple angles, b-roll, old tech as visual backdrop, me asking myself questions on camera -- and I know exactly what I want to say. I've known for a while.
But here's the thing about the camera: it doesn't give you the edit. Writing I can revise until it's pointed. Until it lands the way I want it to. The camera catches you live -- your voice, your delivery, the way you actually sound when you're saying something real. You don't get to fix it after. And something about that keeps me circling instead of landing.
The house has to be empty when I record. I still don't fully understand that one. But I know it's true.
That's not a tools problem. If you read the section about not getting stuck in the means, you already know the version where the gear becomes the reason you haven't started. This is the same trap wearing different clothes. Waiting for the empty house. The right haircut. The good lighting. It all feels like preparation. Most of the time it's tolerated procrastination. Movement that feels like momentum but isn't.
Writing this section is Day One for that project. Not the recording. Not the production. This.
Because here's what I know about One Day -- and its quieter cousin, Some Day: they usually mean never. Some Day doesn't even bother with a timeline. It's One Day without the ambition.
Someone else once put it this way: people think they need perfect conditions to start, when in reality, starting is the perfect condition. I've arrived at the same place from a different direction. The framing changes. The conclusion doesn't.
The dash on my headstone -- the one I keep meaning to write about, and hopefully by the time you read this it's more than just an empty stub labeled "The Dash" -- runs from 1981 forward. I don't know where it ends. "Things I thought about" is not what I want filling the space between those two dates.
You've watched me build things. You've watched me struggle to start others. Both parts are real.
Whatever is on your mind.
Just start.
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The Dash
[ coming soon ]
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Two Kinds of People
There are two kinds of people in this world:
those who say they can, and those who say they can't.They're both usually right.
I have found that what you tell yourself about what's possible tends to become true not because the universe is listening, but because belief shapes what you attempt, and what you attempt shapes what you become.
Be careful which camp you wander into.
It has a way of feeling permanent once you're there. -
Don't Get Stuck in the Means
You don't need a $2,000 camera to be a photographer.
You need a camera.The art is the point.
The tools are just how you get there.I've bought laptops to make videos I hadn't written yet.
Upgraded hardware to run software I barely understood.
Researched gimbals for a steady shot I've imagined exactly once.The gear felt like progress.
It wasn't.
It was just safer than making the thing.That's the trap.
When the means become the reason you haven't started.
I know it because I live it.When I put together your voiceover, I spent hours on the technical side.
EQ. Levels. Clarity. Noise. Timing.Not because I'm good at it.
Because it gave me somewhere to be that wasn't the microphone.The technical side has a right answer.
I can find it.
I can improve it.
I can get it correct.My voice doesn't.
At the end of every setting, every adjustment, every blended take, it's just me on the other side.Not right.
Not wrong.
Just me.Writing I can revise into honesty.
I can rewrite this sentence until it sounds like me.
I've done it a hundred times putting this together for you.The microphone doesn't work that way.
When it's on, it catches you live.
Your voice.
Your delivery.
The way you actually sound when you're saying something real.I've blended takes trying to get the right version of a word.
Then heard the room difference between them and started over.It's why I still haven't done the documentary style talks I've been planning.
Not because I don't know what to say.
I know exactly what I want to say.I just can't fix it after.
Start before the microphone stops scaring you.
Because it might not stop.
And the thing you're trying to make is worth more than the conditions you're waiting for.Upgrade when something is genuinely in your way.
Not when you're just afraid of being heard.One day someone will hear something you made.
They won't remember the noise floor.They'll hear you.
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Critical Thinking
[ coming soon ]
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Discipline Over Motivation
[ coming soon ]
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The Same Life Between 70K and a Million
Something my mom told me that stuck.
She said that between about seventy thousand a year and a million a year, we all live the same life. We all work eight hours a day. We all have a house. Most of us have two cars. We all take an annual vacation.
The seventy thousand version might be a Toyota, a small split level, a week in Ocean City. The million dollar version might be a Mercedes, a bigger house, a week in the Caribbean.
The trim is different. The shape is the same.
Job. Shelter. A way to get around. A stretch of time off once a year. The needs get met either way.
Don't get caught up in it. Don't let money dominate everything.
Notes
What I See
Not lessons. Just what I notice.
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The Third Person
For a while, you referred to yourself in the third person. Cooper is happy. Cooper wants to run. I don't know exactly when it stopped. I should have written more of it down while it was happening. This is me doing that now, late.
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What I See When I Look at You
When I look at you, I see everything I can no longer see in myself. My trajectory has mostly announced itself. I know roughly the shape of what I am, what I'm good at, where my edges are. Yours hasn't. You could love anything. You could be extraordinary at something that doesn't exist yet. The number of doors still open for you is one of the most beautiful things I have ever been close to. I watch you and I feel it constantly.
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Watching You Play
I did not expect it to feel the way it did. Watching you compete. The effort, the focus, the way you just play. Something in me goes quiet. Just proud. I didn't know it would hit me that hard. I'm still a little surprised by it every time.
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What I Can't Wait to Teach You
There's a difference between teaching someone what to think and teaching someone how to think. Most education confuses the two. I want to teach you the second one: how to examine an argument, how to hold a position and still question it, how to tell the difference between a belief and a feeling. The day you make a genuinely good argument against something I've told you will be one of the best days I can imagine.
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The Worry I Carry
I worry about the way I'm bringing you up.
Not in the obvious ways. I think about you constantly. I'm present. I show up. That's not the worry.
The worry is that I'm bringing you up in my way, and I don't know if my way is right. I have theories. I have reasons for everything I do. But theories aren't proof, and you're the experiment.
I'm trying to find the line between hovering over you and leaving you to figure it out alone. I don't know where that line is. I move it constantly.
You have too much. When I was a kid and asked for something, the answer was often no, and the reason was that we couldn't afford it. That was a clean no. My parents weren't withholding. They were telling the truth. It taught me to wait. It taught me that wanting something and getting something were different, and that the gap between them was where you lived most of the time.
I can't give you that no. Not the same one. When I tell you no, the real reason is that I don't think you've earned it, or I don't think you need it, or I don't think it's good for you. Those are harder nos than my parents had to say. "We can't" is a fact. "I won't" is a judgment.
I should say no more than I do. I don't question myself when I say no. I question myself when I say yes. I say yes because I like seeing you happy. Because it's easier on me in the moment. Because the smile is right there and the lesson is somewhere down the road. But I think every easy yes today is a harder problem later. I'd rather you be a happy adult than a dependent child forever. Dependent on me, on someone, on anything outside yourself. Suffer a little now or suffer a lot later. That math doesn't change. I just keep forgetting it when you ask.
You ask Spotify for a song and the song plays. You wanted to hear something I had to wait for, on the radio, with my finger on a tape deck, hoping I caught the start. I don't think the waiting made me better than you. But I think the waiting taught me something, and I don't know what's teaching you the same thing.
It took me decades to work my way toward the kind of instant access you were born into. Every generation before me had to learn patience because patience was the default. You start where I ended up. I don't know how to teach a lesson that used to teach itself.
Boredom taught me something too. Long car rides with nothing. No screen. No music I picked. Just the window. I think boredom is a privilege now. I notice I can't sit in it myself anymore. Always a podcast, always music, always something filling the space. I worry I'm raising you in a house where the space never gets filled by you, because something else fills it first.
You have a handheld gamer. Two VR headsets. A tablet. A connected house. Two cars in the driveway nicer than anything I rode in until I was working. This is your starting line. My first job got me a house bigger than the one I grew up in. Yours probably won't. I worry you'll measure your launch against mine and think you failed, when really I just gave you a runway that makes the math impossible.
I also worry I'll subsidize it. That I won't be able to watch you want something and not give it to you. That the same thing that makes me say yes today will make me say yes when you're thirty, and you'll never have to find out what you can build on your own.
I bought you an expensive bike this spring. I didn't own a bike that nice until I was almost forty. The store guy thought it was too big for you. I could see him thinking it. I bought it anyway because I knew you could handle it, and you did. You handle it better than I expected. I'm proud of that. I was right to trust you.
A few weeks later you told someone what it cost. You'd seen the price tag. You'd done the math. You're sharp like that. I cringed when you said it out loud. We talked about it after. About not bragging about what things cost. About why we got that bike, which was to teach you gears and to give you something you'd ride for ten years. Not to have a nice bike. We talked about how what you have doesn't make you better or worse than anyone else, and how value isn't measured in price, as counterintuitive as that sounds, at least not on the things that actually matter. Character.
That conversation is the whole problem in miniature. You're smart enough to understand value. You're not yet old enough to understand what's tacky to say out loud about it. I'm watching you learn the second part in real time and I don't know if I'm helping or just narrating.
Not all of it is worry. Some of what I give you is on purpose, and I'd give it again.
My dad trusted me with technology when I was your age. Our first computer. The camcorder. The VCR. Anything that came in a box, he handed to me. He said I read the manuals, and that I'd end up teaching him how to program the thing he bought. He was right. Most of what I do for a living traces back to him handing me equipment he could have kept on a shelf.
So I hand you mine. The DSLR. The VR headsets. My phone when you ask. I let you on the gaming PC because you figured out how to use it. You make Roblox worlds at six. You navigate Linux and Windows and Mac without thinking about which is which. When I see you wield something I assumed was too complex for you, I'm not surprised anymore. I'm just glad I didn't get in the way.
The trust isn't the worry. I have no doubt you can handle the equipment. The worry is whether you understand what it is. That most kids your age aren't using a real DSLR. That what you tinker with is the top of what people work toward. I don't want to hand you cheap versions of things because cheap things teach you less. I also don't want this to feel normal. I don't want you to be a snob. I don't want you to be entitled. If I knew you understood the value of what you're holding, I would hand you more without thinking. That's the line I'm walking. Not whether you can be trusted with the goods. Whether the goods are quietly teaching you the wrong thing about goods.
That's not the only one.
I let you make your own decisions. More than most parents would. I don't censor much. You watched Deadpool when you were four. I'm sure people would judge me for it. You knew it was fake. We talk about what's fake and what isn't. We talk about time and place. You can't swear, but I don't keep the world from you.
I do this on purpose. I'm trying to prepare you for the road, not prepare the road for you. I think of myself as raising an adult, not a child. I think kids are capable of more than adults give them credit for.
I want you to be a critical thinker. I want you to make your own decisions and know why you made them. Not because the crowd decided. Not because someone you respect handed you the answer. I want you to learn how to debate. How to disagree without flinching. How discourse makes you stronger and how dodging it makes you weak. I won't tell you what to think. I'll tell you to think. I'll show you why I think what I think when you ask. And I'll respect it when you land somewhere different.
I can't wait for the day you change my mind on something. When you make an argument so original, so compelling, so far outside the box I built for myself, that I have to put down what I believed and pick up what you handed me. I want my eyes opened by you. I want to be so proud I can't speak.
I let you fail where failing is survivable. When you bring your hand back to swing at me, I tell you I won't stop you, and I tell you what comes after. Most of the time you don't swing. When you do, you learn something. It feels wrong to write that down.
I could redirect you. I could move you away before the swing. I could shut you down before the words come out of your mouth, and you'd listen, because I'm your dad and you respect that. But you'd learn one thing only. That I'm the boss. Nothing about the choice you were about to make. Nothing about why it was a bad one. Just that I had the authority to stop it.
I won't always have that authority. Most of your life I won't be in the room. So I want you to see the whole arc while I am. Bad decision, bad outcome. Play stupid games, win stupid prizes. Learn the pattern while the prizes are small and I'm here to absorb the rest. If I cut you off every time, you never see the loop close. You just see me cutting you off.
The same logic is why I don't step in when other kids are mean to you.
I want to. I cannot describe to you how much I want to. When a kid is cruel to you on a playground, my first instinct is something I won't write down. When you ask another kid if he'll be your friend and he says no, I want to scold him. I want to scold his parents. It hurts me in a way it doesn't seem to hurt you. You shake it off. I carry it home.
But I don't step in. Because the world is not fair and it is not nice and not everyone will like you, and I can't be in every room where that's true. If I rescue you from it now, I teach you to expect rescue. And no one is coming to rescue you when you're thirty.
I grew up believing tattling got you nowhere. There was no principal of the workplace. There was no referee for adult life. You handled it or you didn't. That's becoming less true. There are more accommodations now, more channels for grievance, more ways to outsource the discomfort. I understand why some of that exists. Some of it is a real correction. But a lot of it is the road being paved smoother and smoother for kids who will eventually have to walk on something rougher.
I don't want you using your labels as excuses. Whatever they end up being. Labels are tools to understand yourself so you can work with what you've got. They are not permission slips. They are not reasons the world owes you a softer version of itself. I want you to know what you are and then I want you to be formidable anyway.
I have more than my family had. I thought it would make me happier than it did. It made me happier. Just not as much as I thought. I want you to have the money and the maturity. I want you to have what I have and the things I don't.
I won't know for a long time whether any of this worked. Maybe ever.
The one thing I don't debate is what I want for you.
I want you happier than I am. I want you healthier than I am. I want you to cope better than I cope. I want you to love deeper than I've loved. I want you to make money without it costing you what it cost me. I want you to find work that fulfills you instead of work that pays you to feel less.
Be better than me.
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The Forbidden Thing
My mom didn't make much taboo.
We could drink before twenty-one if we were responsible. Curfews were thin. The rules were few and the expectations were heavy. Handle yourself. Don't be stupid in ways you can't come back from.
I went to college and watched what happened to the kids raised the other way. Eighteen years of no, then first semester they detonated. Drank like they were settling a score. Failed out by Christmas. Some never recovered the trajectory they showed up with.
My sister and I didn't drink in college. Still mostly don't. Not because we were told not to. Because it was never loaded.
The taboo creates the appetite. Lock something behind a door for eighteen years and the door becomes the point.
My mom never built that door. So there was nothing on the other side of it to chase.
I let you give me the finger. You learned it from Top Gun and you love it. You love that you can almost say something you're not supposed to say. The rule is you can only do it jokingly, and you can only do it around me. You've never broken either rule. Sometimes you sneak it behind your hand when other people are in the room, like it's our secret. I can feel the pressure release every time.
It feels wrong to write down. I'm sure it's the kind of thing people would judge me for. But you already understand time and place better than kids who've been told no every time. You learned it by being allowed.
I know how this reads from the outside. I can't prove the counterfactual. I can't show you the version of you raised under lock and key and run the comparison. All I have is what happened to me, what happened to my sister, and what I watched happen to the kids who got the other treatment.
What you resist, persists. The kids who blew up in college weren't blowing up over alcohol. They were blowing up over eighteen years of compression. The substance was incidental. The pressure was the thing.
I'd rather you grow up in a house with low pressure and high expectations than the other way around. I'd rather the things adults do not be exotic to you. I'd rather you meet the world in small doses while I'm here to talk about it, than meet all of it at once the day you leave.
Worth Your Time
Watch These
Some things are said better by others. These are the clips I kept coming back to that put words to something I already knew but couldn't quite say as well.