30/05/2026
DON’T BE ADDICTED TO TUTORIALS
Learning can become a trap.
It usually starts with genuine interest. You watch one tutorial, then another, then another. Before long, you’re spending hours learning but making very little progress in real life.
The danger is that you can become highly informed but seriously inexperienced.
I’ve been there myself.
Research, study, and education are important. But there comes a point where knowledge stops being useful unless it is applied. You can spend years watching other people build careers while convincing yourself you’re preparing for yours.
The reality is that the world rewards ex*****on.
In the film industry, for example, nobody spends much time asking how many tutorials you’ve watched. It is already assumed that you know your job. What people notice is how you communicate, how you solve problems, how you handle pressure, and whether you are someone they enjoy working with.
What’s interesting is that the actual shot on set is often only a small fraction of the day. Most of the time is spent preparing, setting up, discussing ideas, asking questions, solving problems, and working together as a team.
Technical knowledge gets you through the door.
Character, presence, and experience keep you in the room.
So if you’ve been stuck in an endless cycle of tutorials, courses, and research, this is your sign to go outside and start.
You may not have the perfect camera.
You may not have enough money.
You may not know where to begin.
That’s okay.
Those are the real challenges you should be learning how to overcome.
Instead of watching someone else achieve their goals, start building your own. Set small targets. Acquire one thing at a time. Learn one lesson at a time. Take one step at a time.
Because no tutorial can replace experience.
At some point, you have to stop watching and start doing.