Mikhail Bezverkhii – Product Manager | Consulting

šŸŽ¢ Good luck, have fun

On Friday I posted a video on my YouTube channel about why you shouldn’t try to ā€œdevelop yourselfā€ through a hobby. It’s a good one — I genuinely recommend watching it, though unfortunately it’s in Russian for now :)


Today I want to talk about a related topic: why you shouldn’t choose a ā€œdevelopment-orientedā€ hobby in the first place. Let me start with a question: what do you think chess develops in a person above all else? If your answer was intelligence, discipline, or strategic thinking — you lose. The main thing chess develops is the damn ability to play chess. Second question: what, in your opinion, does a passion for the game show ā€œWhat? Where? When?ā€ develop first? By now you’ve probably noticed the pattern: it develops the ability to play that exact game.


If you want to learn skill X by doing activity Y, you’re taking an irrational route — just practice X directly. I’m not touching the obvious ā€œtrainingā€ scenarios here, like using a flight simulator before flying a real plane — managing risk and gradual exposure are part of proper training.


Once we understand that you learn an activity primarily through that activity itself, we can ask: but surely a hobby can teach you something, right? Why not start dancing to improve body control? And that’s a valid question — but the answer is simple: if the only goal is body control, then there’s probably a much more efficient training program for that. But if you enjoy dancing for its own sake — then you should absolutely go, and you’ll get the body control as a nice side effect.


A hobby should be — or remain — a safe place, a way to take care of yourself and actually rest. And I don’t know a single hobby that doesn’t make you grow in some way. Any sport teaches you to handle loss and enjoy victory, dancing teaches social interaction, debates, stand-up, and quiz games train your ability to think fast and connect facts. But the moment you start measuring your hobby not by the joy it brings, but by its ā€œoutput,ā€ your rest turns into exhausting work.


Yesterday I wrote that exhausting work is not something we can sustain for long. So it’s better to choose things that genuinely bring you joy.