It’s been almost two months since I bought Feynman’s exercises. I didn’t expect physics to capture my attention this much. I’ve finished six chapters and created 200 new Mochi cards since then.

The exercises turned out to be the key to understanding. There were many times when I read a chapter, thought I understood it, but then found myself lost when trying to solve a practical problem. There must be a reason for this phenomenon. My guess is that it’s easy to confuse familiarity with understanding. Reading gives you the sense of the tools you can use, but it doesn’t teach you how to use them.

Doing exercises highlighted how much I’ve forgotten from mathematics. As a refresher, I skimmed through Lang’s Basic Mathematics. I started going through Spivak’s Calculus, which has even more exercises than the Feynman’s books.

This experience makes me wonder how it’s possible to cover everything in university. Sometimes I spend days thinking about a single problem. I don’t know if you can afford that when you have other subjects to study.