DiscoverFWACATAMM 33- The Joy of Learning
MM 33- The Joy of Learning

MM 33- The Joy of Learning

Update: 2025-10-06
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Hey there, fuckos. Welcome back to another Monday Motivation—your weekly reminder that your brain is not just for storing old passwords and random Die Hard quotes.

I’m FWACATA—your art dad, your creative comrade, your podcaster-shouter of truths.

And today’s episode? The Joy of Learning.
Not the homework kind. Not the “show your work on the math problem” kind.
I’m talking about learning as fuel. The good shit.

Now, I know what you’re thinking:
“Learning? Didn’t I leave that back in high school, right next to my bad haircut and my crippling acne?”

Yeah, me too. But here’s the thing—learning isn’t punishment. It’s fuel. It’s rocket fuel for your brain-car. Without it? You’re just Fred Flintstoning your way through projects, barefoot on gravel, wondering why everything feels stale.

When I was working for the Hormel family as an art archivist—yes, that Hormel family—my boss used to say, “I don’t want to hear ‘I don’t know.’ I want to hear ‘I’ll find out.’” That stuck with me. “I don’t know” isn’t an answer. It’s an excuse. And excuses are where ideas go to die.

Here’s a dirty little secret: Talent is just passion times time.
That’s it. No magic, no divine spark from the art gods. Just passion, multiplied by time, multiplied by the hours you put in.

Learning is what accelerates that equation. It’s the turbo boost, the NOS in your Fast & Furious brain.

And here’s the kicker: the learning doesn’t even have to be “useful.”

Saul Alinsky studied sea urchins. David Bowie read about space exploration.
Me? I spent an entire afternoon learning about raccoons. And now I can’t stop drawing them like they’re plotting world domination.

Sometimes the weirdest, most random knowledge is exactly what sparks the coolest ideas.

Take Kim Jung Gi—the late, great Korean artist. Absolute monster talent. Guy could draw helicopters, motorcycles, and entire battlefields straight out of his head.

Why? Because he studied everything. He took apart scooters and sketched every part. He drew the same engines, gears, and pistons over and over until he understood them.

That’s the power of learning. When you absorb knowledge, it becomes part of your mental toolbox. You’re not just copying anymore—you’re creating.

Look, learning keeps you alive. Without it, your brain turns into that one potato in the pantry—the one you forgot about—that sprouts alien tentacles and freaks you out when you find it.

Curiosity is oxygen. It keeps your art fresh, keeps your perspective sharp, and keeps you from turning into that jaded asshole who thinks they’ve got nothing left to learn.

So here’s my challenge for you this week:

Pick one thing—just one—that you don’t know… and dive into it.

  • Learn a new recipe.

  • Read about an artist you’ve never heard of.

  • Watch a tutorial on how to play the ukulele. (You don’t even need to own one. That’s not the point.)

The point isn’t mastery. The point is movement. Learning humbles you. And it energizes you.

So celebrate the joy of learning. Stay curious. Stay weird. Stay that person who always asks why—even if it annoys the hell out of everyone around you.

Because curiosity isn’t childish. Curiosity is how you stay alive. And when you pour that new knowledge into your art—your writing, your music, your Nicholas Cage hot-glue sculptures—you’ll find inspiration waiting like an old friend.

That’s it for this week’s Monday Motivation.
Stay curious. Stay weird. And as always—be good.


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MM 33- The Joy of Learning

MM 33- The Joy of Learning

FWACATA