Amateur Be New -
Neuroscientists call this the "Beginner’s Glow." When you are new to a task (playing the piano, coding, welding), your brain lights up like a Christmas tree. The prefrontal cortex is hyperactive. Neuroplasticity is at its peak. You are making thousands of new connections per second.
Consider the "Dunning-Kruger Effect," but flip it. Experts often suffer from tunnel vision. They know what cannot be done. Amateurs, because they "be new," don't know the rules. And by not knowing the rules, they accidentally break them. amateur be new
This is the "amateur portfolio" lifestyle. You don't retire from life; you re-tire (re-attire) into a new beginner’s outfit. The world does not need more polished experts. It is drowning in them. Experts have built the climate crisis, the information bubble, and the burnout economy. Neuroscientists call this the "Beginner’s Glow
At first glance, the phrase looks like a translation error or a fragment of broken English. But look closer. "Amateur be new" is not a grammatical mistake; it is a manifesto. It declares that to be an amateur is to be constantly new—new to a skill, new to a perspective, new to the vulnerability that creates true innovation. You are making thousands of new connections per second