Weekly Voice Insights #87 – Mastery Requires Repetition
These Greek words come directly from the quote:
• προκόπτειν (prokóptein): to make progress, advance
• δοκεῖν (dokein): to seem, appear
• μωρός (mōrós): foolish, dull
• ἀμαθής (amathḗs): ignorant, unlearned
prokóptein: The Work of Repetition
Progress is usually quieter than people expect, often appearing through repetition, small corrections, uneven attempts, and continued practice after enthusiasm fades. Many worthwhile gains arrive gradually enough that others may not notice them at all.
In speaking, growth may appear as steadier pacing, clearer phrasing, better timing, or greater ease under pressure. None of these improvements require spectacle. They require continued work.
dokein: Seeming and Becoming
What appears polished is not always well built, and what appears awkward is not always weak.
Someone trying a new speaking habit may look less natural for a time. A presenter learning to pause may initially seem slower. A leader choosing clearer language may sound more direct than before. Early adjustments can look unusual before they become skillful.
This is where it can be easy to stop, especially when temporary awkwardness is mistaken for failure.
mōrós: Fear of Looking Foolish
The fear of looking foolish can be stronger than the desire to improve.
It can prevent a person from asking a needed question, posting the first video, practicing a new communication style, or speaking with fuller commitment. Instead of working on the skill itself, energy is spent managing how things might be judged.
Others may judge, and that possibility sits outside your control. What remains available is the quality of your preparation, your repetitions, and your willingness to continue practicing.
amathḗs: The Beginner Stage Is Part of Learning
The beginner stage belongs to every path of growth. Early uncertainty marks the point where learning begins and experience is built through continued practice. A beginner’s mind keeps that process open through curiosity, attention, and willingness to learn.
When approached with patience, curiosity, and steady effort, unfamiliar work becomes familiar.
In Practice
I felt this directly while learning to make TikTok videos. Working on a new platform brought immediate uncertainty. I did not yet know the rhythm, the tools, the timing, or what would connect with people. Alongside that came a familiar discomfort: not wanting to appear foolish or inexperienced while learning in public.
That is where the quote became practical for me. If I already knew how to do it, it would not be new. The task was not to protect my image. The task was to learn.
When I first wrote these reflections, I had only made a few videos. Now I have made around twenty. In those repetitions, I have learned from the format itself: how to work inside a 30–40 second limit, how to get to the point faster, how to communicate more directly, and how to feel more at ease with the medium.
At first, I was following formulas more closely. The early attempts felt more structured, but they also felt less like me. With continued practice, I began to understand the difference between using a framework and being confined by one. Now the structure is becoming something I can adapt to my own way of communicating.
The comfort did not arrive before doing the work. It arrived through doing the work.
Even now, I sometimes feel the hesitation before posting: should I do this? That voice may still appear, but it no longer gets the final say.
Some days the useful step was persistence. Some days it was letting go of self-judgment. Some days it was noticing one small improvement and repeating it. Those small adjustments mattered more than guessing how I was being perceived.
The same pattern has appeared for me in presentations, teaching, rehearsal, and leadership communication. At the beginning of something new, there can be second-guessing, uncertainty, and the feeling of needing to prove that you belong in the task. With each repetition, however, something useful is learned. Through that process, the work becomes stronger, more natural, and more your own.



.png)


