Anti-Mastery
/For a long time, before starting this site and refining my approach to performing social magic, I had the same issue most amateurs face when performing for friends and family: a generally steady decline in interest and appreciation for the tricks I was showing people..
The first time they see a trick from you, they're completely enthralled—even if the trick is nothing special. Months later there is less engagement. Years on, you have the "magician's wife" situation where they're significantly less interested in what you have to show them unless it's profoundly strong. Just a gradual decline in enthusiasm over time.
My solution at that time was to continually find new people to perform for. I'd perform regularly for a new person in my life, and then as time passed and their reactions lessened I'd start performing for them much less—maybe only every few months—and find fresh faces to focus on instead.
But then I stumbled onto a different approach that has proven to have much more enduring appeal.
It's very simple. The key is just never implying mastery. Nothing should ever feel "done."
In the past, the experience for people was:
Andy does magic tricks.
He showed me a trick.
He showed me another trick.
He showed me another trick.
That might happen all in one night or over the course of a year. But each thing was its own separate experience—the feeling being that I had perfected this one thing and was now presenting it for their approval. And that's terrible for ongoing interest.
Imagine it this way. Let's say someone shows you some artwork they've done. Finished pieces. They're masters of their craft. At first you're like, "Wow, this is great! You're so talented." But as time goes by, you stop being surprised by their talent. It's expected now. So you're just comparing piece to piece: is this new one measurably more impressive than the last? If yes, maybe a reaction. If not, more of the same.
Now imagine a friend who is no master, but just someone who is interested in art and always experimenting with new techniques. Their pursuit is likely to hold your interest much longer even if their work is nowhere near as good as the first person's. Even if they're a total amateur. Even if the quality is all over the place. In fact, that only makes their pursuit more interesting.
This is the heart of anti-mastery.
Say "I can read minds" to someone you see regularly and you've put an expiration date on the experience. There's only so many times that premise can land before it stops feeling impossible and starts feeling expected. Even if someone could actually read minds, you'd lose interest in watching it pretty quickly.
But if it's something you're working on—something you've been reading about, experimenting with, trying to get a handle on—that same premise stays alive indefinitely. It's no longer a claim, now it's a thread that makes sense to return to again and again. You can come back to it, push it further, try a different angle, let it succeed, let it miss, let it evolve. People stay interested because it's still in motion.
The exceptions are:
If you want to claim an ability with someone you'll never see again, go ahead.
If you want to claim something so frivolous you'd only ever do it once, go ahead. For example: "I don't know why, but ever since I was little I could tell how many grapes someone can fit in their mouth."
But never claim the big abilities: mind reading, sleight-of-hand expertise, psychological manipulation, seeing the future, etc.
This is the best approach for an amateur who wants to play the long game. You're always learning. You've never mastered anything. You're exploring different approaches and you want their feedback. You're growing, you're on a journey and you're inviting them along for it.