『# Transform "I Can't" Into "I Can't Yet" — The Two Words That Unlock Your Brain's Hidden Potential』のカバーアート

# Transform "I Can't" Into "I Can't Yet" — The Two Words That Unlock Your Brain's Hidden Potential

# Transform "I Can't" Into "I Can't Yet" — The Two Words That Unlock Your Brain's Hidden Potential

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2026年5月12日まで。4か月目以降は月額1,500円で自動更新します。

概要

# The Magnificent Power of "Not Yet"

There's a peculiar cognitive trap that snares even the brightest minds: the tyranny of the present tense. "I can't do this," we say, as if our current abilities represent some immutable truth carved into the universe. But what if we borrowed a trick from Carol Dweck's growth mindset research and added two magic words?

"I can't do this *yet*."

That tiny suffix transforms a period into an ellipsis. It acknowledges reality while simultaneously opening a door to possibility. It's not toxic positivity—you're not pretending you can already do something you can't. You're simply recognizing that human beings are learning machines, and your current snapshot doesn't represent your final form.

Consider the absurdity of accepting our infant limitations as permanent. Imagine a baby thinking, "Well, I've fallen down seventeen times trying to walk, so clearly I'm not a walking person." We'd find that ridiculous. Yet we do exactly this as adults when we encounter calculus, oil painting, or salsa dancing.

Here's where it gets intellectually interesting: neuroscience backs this up. Your brain's plasticity doesn't retire at twenty-five, despite what we once thought. London taxi drivers literally grow their hippocampi learning navigation routes. Musicians develop enhanced corpus callosum connectivity. Your brain is remodeling itself right now, as you read this, creating new synaptic connections based on what you expose it to.

The optimistic reframe isn't delusional—it's empirically grounded. When you say "I can't draw," you're making a statement about the present while ignoring probability theory. Given practice, time, and decent instruction, what are the actual odds you couldn't improve significantly? Nearly zero.

This applies beyond skills. "This problem has no solution" becomes "This problem has no solution I've found yet." "Nobody understands me" transforms into "Nobody understands me yet." The addition doesn't guarantee outcomes, but it keeps you in the game long enough for the improbable to become possible.

The philosopher William James wrote that belief creates the actual fact. He wasn't advocating magical thinking, but recognizing that our beliefs about what's possible directly influence our effort, persistence, and attention—which then influence outcomes.

So today, audit your self-statements. Find those absolute declarations of limitation. Then append those two letters: Y-E-T. Not as a hollow affirmation, but as a acknowledgment of a scientific reality: you're an unfinished project with unexpected chapters still to write.

You're not stuck. You're just not there yet.

This content was created in partnership and with the help of Artificial Intelligence AI

This episode includes AI-generated content.
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