How Gritty Are You?
A chapter summary from Grit by Angela Duckworth.
“Duckworth presents her Grit Scale, a brief self-assessment that measures the two components of grit (passion + perseverance) across twelve statements.”
Duckworth presents her Grit Scale, a brief self-assessment that measures the two components of grit (passion + perseverance) across twelve statements. The score is a snapshot, not a sentence — but it is a reliable predictor across populations: West Point cadets, spelling-bee finalists, sales workers, soldiers, teachers, sales jobs at telemarketing firms.
The interesting finding inside the scale is that the perseverance items predict more than the passion items. Most people have some level of passion for what they do; far fewer have the perseverance to stay with it through the inevitable plateaus and discouragements. The grittier person is not necessarily the one who feels more strongly; it is the one who keeps working after the feeling fades.
The chapter is also where Duckworth's research turns from descriptive to actionable. Grit scores are not fixed. People develop them. They develop them by deliberately practicing the two halves: getting more clear about long-term goals (the passion axis) and more disciplined about the daily work that serves those goals (the perseverance axis).
The practical move is to take the scale honestly and identify whether you score lower on passion or perseverance. The remediation for each is different. The chapter's invitation is to find out which version of grit you most need to build.
The Grit Scale's two subscales — consistency of interests (passion) and perseverance of effort — let Duckworth separate the steadiness of what you pursue from the steadiness of how hard you pursue it, and the data hold a quiet surprise: the perseverance items predict outcomes more strongly than the passion items, meaning the willingness to keep working through difficulty matters even more than the intensity of feeling about the goal. She is careful that the score is a snapshot for reflection, not a sentence — grit is moderately stable but genuinely changeable, and it tends to rise with age, a pattern she calls the maturity principle, as people learn over time to commit to longer goals and stick with them. The scale has predicted who finishes across the same span of populations the book keeps returning to: West Point completion, spelling-bee advancement, retention in demanding jobs, even staying married. What it does not do is fix anyone in place; a low score at twenty-five does not forecast a low score at forty. The chapter's purpose is diagnostic rather than judgmental — to give the reader an honest baseline and the encouraging news that the trait it measures is one the rest of the book will show how to grow.
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More from Grit
Grit sits in a curated reading path — each pairing it with other books that sharpen the same idea. Three nearest peers:
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Cal Newport adds the career application of everything above. Habit + character + grit produces career capital — the rare and valuable skills that the market actually rewards. Newport's craftsman-mindset frame answers what to direct all the disciplined habit-building toward: building leverage you can later spend on the autonomy, mission, and conditions that the passion-script wished you could demand directly.
Read first chapter - Essentialismby Greg McKeownFrom Build better habits
Greg McKeown answers the question habits alone can't: which habits, on which goals? The discipline of pursuing less, but better. Once you can build any habit you want, the constraint becomes choosing which ones deserve your finite attention.
Read first chapter - Peakby Anders Ericsson & Robert PoolFrom Build better habits
Anders Ericsson closes the stack with the research that explains how disciplined effort actually translates into skill. Deliberate practice — specific goals, focused attention, immediate feedback, working at the edge of current capability — is the structural pattern underneath everything Newport, Duckworth, and the earlier books in the stack describe. Read after the previous seven, Peak retroactively organizes the entire stack: the habits, the character, the focus, the grit, the career capital all compound only when the underlying practice has the four properties Ericsson identifies. Without those properties, decades of disciplined repetition produce no improvement past basic competence; with them, sustained practice produces the expert performance the stack has been pointing at the entire time.
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