There is a mountain of evidence to the contrary. No matter how much you or I would practice, study, etc. we would never become as good as tourist. Most people reach their plateau in competitive coding within 1 year.
is it at all possible that practice and study are insufficient to create further growth? What I think faizshah is talking about is that there is enormous complexity that goes into creating skill.
what sort of community do you leverage for their knowledge? how frequently do you expose yourself to new ideas? do you practice abstraction in places other than code? do you practice effectively and take notes that you review? keep a journal? meditate? are you in good cardiovascular shape?
all of these are the tip of the iceberg when it comes to contributing factors. a plateau is a sign of stagnant processes.
I apologize in advance for what I'm sure is a frustrating tone. I'm sympathetic to your situation.
> is it at all possible that practice and study are insufficient to create further growth? What I think faizshah is talking about is that there is enormous complexity that goes into creating skill.
Sure there is enormous complexity and many factors that go into creating skill, but that's a generic claim, whereas faizsah was making some specific claims. In particular, they were claiming that talent does not exist (or "innate ability" is not a significant contributor to creation of skill, if you want to phrase it more softly). There is a mountain of evidence to show that innate ability is one of the largest differentiating factors between "masters" at a skill compared to "normal people" who practice that skill.
> a plateau is a sign of stagnant processes.
Nope, there are limits to achievable skill. If I practice height jumping, I'm going to plateau pretty quickly and make only incremental improvements even with the best of processes. Same goes for mental pursuits like competitive programming as well.
... And the limits are personal, and can vary immensely, unfair as it might be. Some people high jump 2.45 meter, or design a spaceship that flies to the moon, whilst most people couldn't do this in a thousand lifetimes
Usually, though, people don't do something for long enough to get close to their limits, so, generally in life, all this doesn't matter that much, does it.
And to keep trying and doing what one enjoy is good advice :-)
For example, here's my Codeforces profile: https://codeforces.com/profile/baobab
Started in 2015, plateau'd in 2016 and no measurable improvement from subsequent 3 years of practice and study.