Steven Pressfield tries to define the difference in The War of Art:
The amateur plays for fun. The professional plays for keeps.
I think he's got it wrong. There are plenty of programmers who don't "play for fun," who program as a vocation and not a hobby, who work full time, and who are there, often unhappily, nearly seven days a week. That doesn't make them pros in my book.To the amateur, the game is his avocation. To the pro, it’s his vocation.The amateur plays part-time, the professional full-time.The amateur is a weekend warrior. The professional is there seven days a week.
To me the difference has nothing to do with money or love. It's a different attitude:
- Amateurs go through the motions, professionals focus on what they do.
- Amateurs are satisfied with good enough; professionals push the limits.
- Amateurs just do their work; professionals do their work and study it.
- Amateurs see their work as an isolated subject; professionals tie nearly every field of study to their work.
- Amateurs exercise skills; professionals exercise them--and practice the most important ones.
Thinking about this, I'm halfway between amateur and pro--and I'm now determined to be a pro. That's what this blog is about.
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