The real reason you can’t make money is often not that you lack ability, but that you’ve been using your “ability layer” to solve problems at the “identity layer.” When you treat what you’re good at as the only way to earn money, you become a tool that can be priced, and the market will only give you the corresponding “fair price.” As your ability gets stronger, you’re actually more likely to get trapped in specific execution—and the harder it becomes to break through.



Human thinking has levels: environment, behavior, ability, belief, and then identity and mission. Many people get stuck because they take “what I can do” as “who I am,” leading to repeated high-intensity labor but difficulty in scaling value. The real key is not giving up your strengths, but re-positioning: demote your advantage from “identity” to “tool.” Don’t personally expend it on execution; instead, use it to discover opportunities, amplify value, and organize resources. Transform yourself from “someone who does things” into “someone who defines direction and outcomes.” When your identity shifts from an executor to a higher level, the same ability can drive much greater returns.

So rather than constantly improving your skills, think first: who am I—and how can I make my strengths serve this identity?
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