Question
How do I practice knowledge gaps?
Quick Answer
Pick a domain you consider yourself competent in — programming, cooking, investing, whatever you've spent real time on. Sketch 15-20 key concepts as nodes on paper or in a tool. Draw edges between every pair you can explain a specific relationship for. Now look at what's missing: which nodes have.
The most direct way to practice knowledge gaps is through a focused exercise: Pick a domain you consider yourself competent in — programming, cooking, investing, whatever you've spent real time on. Sketch 15-20 key concepts as nodes on paper or in a tool. Draw edges between every pair you can explain a specific relationship for. Now look at what's missing: which nodes have only one or two connections? Which pairs of nodes should be connected but aren't? Write down the three most surprising gaps. For each gap, write one sentence describing what you would need to learn to create that connection. You've just built a custom curriculum from the structure of your own knowledge.
Common pitfall: Treating gap identification as a one-time audit rather than an ongoing practice. You find gaps, feel a burst of motivation, study for a week, then stop checking. Gaps don't stay fixed — every new node you add creates new potential connections, some of which will be missing. The other failure mode is perfectionism: trying to connect everything to everything. Not every gap matters. The skill is distinguishing structural gaps that block understanding from cosmetic gaps that are merely interesting.
This practice connects to Phase 18 (Knowledge Graphs) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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