Be A Learning Machine

Vinita Gupta
4 min readNov 22, 2019

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Continued learning is a competitive advantage and also a lifelong pursuit. It is stimulating though often frustrating because it is imprecise. Neuroscience and brain imaging reveal that new neurons get produced in the brain, even at later stages of life — but at a slower pace — enabling us to form new connections and keep learning indefinitely.

Understanding difficult concepts and getting good at any trait may be hard, but persistence usually pays off when things begin to gel. This happens when music and comedy flow and when the face in painting begins to look like the real person.

We discover that, at times, taking a break and returning to the problem makes solutions emerge, or, when we get up the next morning, new thinking has evolved, which was not in our heads when we went to bed.

Most important to learning is the long and hard work — over years and decades: 10,000 hours of deliberate practice is the concept popularized by Malcolm Gladwell in his bestseller Outliers.

But what is deliberate may be too complex to get our arms around.

Biologically, the brain has an uncanny ability to fill in the blanks with real and imaginary stuff. The signals generated are fuzzy; then, the brain crystalizes them, and they appear sharp and clear. Mistakes still happen, however.

At best brain is a flawed organ of the body, which tends to optimize and save energy. Evolutionarily it also wants to learn and make sense of the world around us. In this process, we tell ourselves stories e.g., God is the creator of the universe or that slaves were lesser humans, until proven wrong.

We have heard of the invisible gorilla experiment. Half the TV viewers missed the flashing image of gorilla thumping her chest when they were asked to count how many times three basketball players wearing white shirts passed a ball.

At other times, the brain seems to register things we fail to notice. Magicians trick us with the power of suggestion. They choose a person from the audience, who picks a card from a face-up card-deck, while the magician is blindfolded. The brain of the person selected has been primed with the story of the queen, the wife of the ruler of Heartsfield, and reaches out for the Heart-Queen!

There is a lot more to learning.

How to focus and concentrate. I remember in college sitting in the sun during summers in India while preparing for electromagnetic theory exam (a subject in Electrical Engineering) — forcing me to stay attentive by making myself uncomfortable.

Similarly, I devised a strategy to memorize the properties of chemical compounds for the high school chemistry exam. I would create a word by stringing one letter of each property, which would resemble a word I was familiar with — easier to remember. With this map in my head, I was able to recall many properties of 20 different compounds in the exam.

My other experiences came in learning the game of bridge and preparing to compete for tournaments, after turning 60. The neurons in the brain behave much like physical muscles:

  • Bridge coaches will tell you to build bridge muscles by playing regularly and for long periods. Golf teachers use “muscle memory” for the same phenomenon (use it or lose it, as they say).
  • All serious bridge players device their own warm-up routines. I do sudoku and other puzzles before game time. But then ask my coach to give me a couple of bridge puzzles to fire up the bridge brain.

We still have not talked about mindfulness needed in bridge, as in other sports where one has to perform.

What invokes creativity is also puzzling. I painted the scenery of the Golden Gate Bridge of San Francisco, with the hills, the skies, and the water and hung it on the wall. After staring for months, I disliked the way the water looked. Recently, I picked up a bold brush, mixed bold colors and started applying. It got worse. In frustration, I wiped off chunks of paint and tried rounder strokes of color in the wiped out areas. Waves got formed and the artwork became alive.

This was not normal hard work but creativity.

Life-long learning has a cumulative effect. Charlie Munger calls Warren Buffet a learning machine, for example. We all can be learning machines by refining our thinking through self-reflection:

  • Challenging the brain by inverse thinking, i.e., thinking about how to fail rather than how to succeed. It is then we learn what not to do — much easier to grapple.
  • Not being in an autopilot mode. I might start the day by brushing teeth with the wrong hand, or not reach out for tea first thing in the morning.

We may not understand the mechanics of the brain, but we learn to learn through our own experiments and experiences.

After we have toiled long enough, a time comes when athletes, bridge players, stock-pickers, and musicians deliver peak performances. Poets, writers, and artists feel inspired to be creative, and scientists and inventors experience the ah-ha! moment of their discoveries.

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Vinita Gupta
Vinita Gupta

Written by Vinita Gupta

Tech Entrepreneur, Business Woman, Writer/Journalist, National Bridge Champion

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