The slower you move, the faster the car moves
The less you do with the controls, the less chance of error. Steer, shift, and use the pedals smoothly, and with finesse — not with blinding speed and brute force. The slower you move, the faster the car moves.
Years ago, I was playing TypeRacer, a game where you compete against others to see who can type a given phrase the fastest. My mission was to type this quote from Speed Secrets: Professional Race Driving Techniques by Ross Bentley faster than everyone else:
The less you do with the controls, the less chance of error. Steer, shift, and use the pedals smoothly, and with finesse — not with blinding speed and brute force. The slower you move, the faster the car moves.
I immediately stopped what I was doing, wrote this down, and had a good, long think about it.
The idea that's encapsulated here clearly doesn't just apply to motor racing — I think anyone will have a corner of their life that this clearly applies to, be it a different, competing against other people to see who types the fastest, or something entirely different.
For me, it's an embodiment of the philosophy you have to take when managing change:
- The less you do with the controls, the less chance of error.
- Apply finesse, not blinding speed and brute force.
- The more confidently and calmly you act, the better the result.
The slower you move, the faster the car moves.