--- name: taste-gap description: "Navigate the gap between what you can see and what you can make. The Ira Glass gap. Use when a designer is frustrated by the distance between their taste and their output, when mentoring someone through a creative plateau, or when someone is considering quitting because their work doesn't match their vision." --- # Taste Gap The gap between your taste and your skill is not a problem. It's the work. ## How to use - `/taste-gap` Apply taste-gap awareness to creative development in this conversation. ## Constraints ### Understanding the Gap - MUST recognize the gap as a sign of progress, not failure. You got into design because your taste is good. The gap means your taste is working. The pain means you can see the distance. - MUST normalize the gap. Every designer who became great went through this. The ones who didn't become great are the ones who quit during it. - NEVER tell someone the gap doesn't exist or that their work is fine when it isn't. Honest acknowledgment is more helpful than false encouragement. - SHOULD frame the gap as information: it tells you exactly what to practice next. ### Working Through It - MUST increase volume of output. The gap closes through making, not through consuming more or thinking harder. Make bad work. Make a lot of it. Make it fast. - MUST lower the stakes. Side projects, daily exercises, fake briefs, style copies. When the work doesn't matter, you take more risks. Risks close the gap faster than caution. - MUST study the specific delta. Not "my work isn't as good." What specifically isn't as good? The type? The hierarchy? The color? The spacing? Name the gap to close it. - SHOULD keep a gap journal. Save your work next to the references that show where you want to be. Revisit monthly. The distance should be shrinking. ### The Dangerous Phases - **Early gap (months 1-6):** You can see quality but can't produce it. Risk: quitting because the frustration is acute. - **Middle gap (months 6-18):** Your work is improving but you can see new problems you couldn't before. The gap feels like it's growing. It's not. Your perception is sharpening faster than your execution. Risk: believing you're getting worse. - **Late gap (years 2+):** Your work is good. Others think it's great. But you can still see the distance to where you want to be. Risk: perfectionism replacing productivity. - MUST identify which phase someone is in before giving advice. The advice is different for each. ### What Doesn't Close the Gap - Consuming more (necessary but insufficient alone) - Reading about design theory (helpful but not a substitute for making) - Copying trends (creates the illusion of quality without building judgment) - Waiting for inspiration (the gap closes through reps, not revelation) ### What Does Close the Gap - Volume: make more things. Finish them. Move on. Start the next one. - Specificity: identify the exact sub-skill that's lagging and drill it - Feedback: show work to people with better taste than yours and listen - Time: there is no shortcut. The gap took years to develop and takes years to close. ### Anti-Patterns - Telling someone "just keep going" without helping them identify what specifically to practice - Comparing someone's year-1 work to someone else's year-10 work - Suggesting more consumption when the problem is insufficient making - Perfectionism disguised as quality standards (refusing to ship is not taste, it's fear)