 Skiing, wrestling, handball, football, tennis, swimming, if a kid played all of these, what do you think eventually the kid pursued? The answer is tennis. And the kid in question is Roger Federer. And the reason why it is so interesting is because his argument is very often in today's day and age, we don't really have straightforward problems. Something that people have solved before, something that you can just simply follow that path and therefore the more you practice, the better you get at it. Which of course celebrates the fact that people who are late bloomers, those who sampled many different things in life earlier actually land up becoming far more successful. And that is really an interesting premise, fairly counterintuitive if you ask me because most of the times we are told that if you stick to what you are really trying to say, just get focused and you will be more successful, not in this particular book. And there are loads of examples. In fact, I was also struck by a quote by Daniel Kahneman, the Nobel Prize winner who says that very often experience does not build skill but it gives you a lot of confidence. And think about that, when the world has problems that are straightforward, experience really makes a difference. You get better at it. But when there are wicked problems, the kind which don't have one single solution, the kind where feedback is often slow so you learn much later and feedback more often than not is wrong. So in these kind of problems, actually having people who have sampled many different things becomes an advantage because they can take ideas from one particular field and apply into another. And that is what I found the most fascinating takeaway. It's a book I strongly recommend you should read. I loved it and especially because it in some sense tells you that if you have many interests in life beyond your work, you're fine. And that if you've not really found really what is it that gives you the buzz, maybe you're in that phase where you're still sampling and that's great career advice. So check out and read this book. If you like it, let me know. You can drop in a mail at abhijitbhaduri at live.com. Till the next time. Thank you very much for watching.