Friday, October 31, 2025

Edward Quince's Wisdom Bites: Nomads and Motorcycles: The Hard Work of Attitude and the Value of Struggle

If the Nomad letters teach us anything, it’s that success is never a smooth or guaranteed ascent. The adventure continues, the trials never end, and unhappiness and misfortune are bound to occur as long as we live.

The Nomad founders were open and honest about their mistakes. They understood that knowing how to think (philosophy, psychology) was just as vital as any technical method. When reflecting on their approach, they concluded that the greatest challenge wasn’t identifying opportunities or calculating valuations—it was “having the right attitudes.”

Attitude is the ultimate margin of safety—because no model or forecast can protect you from yourself.

But this attitude isn't about naive blind optimism. It’s the quiet strength that endures uncertainty and learns from it. As Robert Pirsig reminds us, problems aren’t solved by abandoning rationality, but by expanding it. Growth occurs through contact with reality, by working, adjusting and learning "on the job" in the arena of life. The Nomad partners, like the protagonist on the motorcycle, learned to absorb the jolts and imperfections of the road rather than curse them.

We often view setbacks as external failures—a bad boss, a rogue market, unfair circumstances. But both Nomad and Pirsag suggest a harder truth: progress demands internal confrontation. The greatest damage often comes not from volatility itself,  but from our "inability to perform probability-based thinking", to hold composure when uncertainty reigns.

The Financial Takeaway:

The deepest form of growth is forged through struggle. True excellence emerges when talent is tempered by humility and discipline—when effort becomes craft.

Nomad’s story reminds us that enduring success is not about the absence of pain, but the persistence of purpose. The “game of life,” as Pirsig wrote, “is the game of everlasting learning.”

Stop viewing work as a mere transaction for money; see it instead as the pursuit of meaning. Maintain the right attitude. Accept that “everybody struggles.” And when the road jolts you—because it will—remember that mistakes don’t define you. They refine you. Choose growth, and keep going.

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