The fog was still sitting on the hills when I put in my earbuds and headed out.
Sebastian Mallaby was talking about billboards.
Tim Ferriss had asked him the question he asks everyone: if you could put anything up there, for millions of people to see, what would it be? Mallaby has spent years inside the minds of the people who shaped modern finance โ the hedge fund managers, the venture capitalists, the builders of things that changed how the world moves money. He has more material than most people accumulate in a lifetime. He could have said anything.
He said: Prepare your mind.
I kept walking. The houses were quiet in the particular way they get when school lets out for summer โ no buses, no car doors, no kids at the corner. Somebody’s sprinklers were running.
The phrase comes originally from Louis Pasteur, who understood something that most people don’t: that chance is not democratic. It does not distribute itself evenly among those who wait. It finds the people who are ready. Chance favors the prepared mind. Pasteur said it, and then he proved it, and then the rest of us spent a century and a half learning it was true.
What struck me about Mallaby’s answer wasn’t the phrase itself. It was the way he said it had kept appearing in his research, surfacing in different decades and different worlds, like a message the material kept trying to send him.
He told the story of Arthur Patterson at Accel Capital. Before a new technology arrived, Accel would work through the implications โ what company needs to be built, what founder fits the moment, what the right pitch looks like. So when an entrepreneur finally walked in, when the situation was live and competitive, they already knew ninety percent of what they were hearing. They could move fast because they had already moved slow.
That’s preparation as institutional practice. But Mallaby found the phrase again in a different register entirely, embedded in a single human moment that has always seemed to me like one of the hinge points of our era.
He was interviewing Ilya Sutskever, asking him why he had seen it so quickly.
In 2017, a paper called Attention Is All You Need appeared online. It described a new architecture for neural networks โ the transformer โ that would eventually rewrite the terms of what artificial intelligence could do. On the day the paper went up, Sutskever read it. And then he ran. He went down the corridor to find his collaborator Alex Radford and told him to stop what he was doing. Everything. Stop. We are going to build a language model on this architecture.
Not someday. Now.
Mallaby asked him how he had seen it so clearly, so fast. And Sutskever’s answer, in its essence, was the same two words: prepared mind.
He had been thinking about the problem of modeling sequential data since his PhD in Canada. For years he had been carrying a question the field hadn’t answered yet. And when the answer appeared โ when the transformer showed up on a website one ordinary day โ he didn’t have to reason his way toward it. He recognized it. The solution arrived and found a mind that had been waiting for it, that had already cleared space for it, that was already arranged around the shape of exactly this kind of answer.
This is what preparation actually is. Not the accumulation of facts. Not readiness in the generic sense, the vague self-improvement sense. It is the long, patient cultivation of a specific question, held close and kept alive until the answer has somewhere to land.
Mallaby chose that phrase for his billboard because it kept finding him โ in the venture capital world, in the AI world, across decades and disciplines and very different kinds of genius. The prepared mind is not a personality trait. It is a practice. It is the work you do before the work arrives.
The sprinklers had clicked off by the time I turned back toward home. The fog was starting to lift off the hills. I was thinking about what I had been preparing for, whether I even knew.
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