The Myth of Individual Genius
I remember sitting in a small room years ago, late at night, staring at a problem I thought I should be able to solve by myself.
I had the tools.
I had the training.
I had the pressure.
And still, the answer wouldn’t come.
What finally broke the stalemate wasn’t brilliance.
It was a conversation.
One message.
One outside perspective.
One sentence that reframed the entire problem.
That moment was humbling. And instructive.
We celebrate individual genius because it’s easy to narrate. But real progress is rarely a solo act.
It’s messy, relational, and often invisible.
The myth persists not because it’s true, but because it’s simple.
Reality is more demanding.
Jacob William
Jacob O. William is a writer exploring technology, systems, and human trust through essays and short fiction, focusing on clarity, ethics, and the quiet costs of modern progress.
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