



Are you?
Probably not. At most, one of my readers is. More likely, none.
Chances are pretty good that, once in a while, you run into something you're just not able to complete alone. So what do you do then?
Some people would say, tough it out. Give it all you've got, and if you are indeed excellent, you'll get it done.
Alone.
Eventually.
Yeah... right! And the sun will shine once those monkeys I mentioned last time, stop blocking it.
Ask for help. Admit that you're human. (Uh, you are, aren't you?) Done correctly, this will get the problem solved the fastest, and with the least amount of total pain and effort, including not only yours but others' too. That's what being excellent is all about, not about looking like Superman.
And now, since this post is late (I'm trying to do them early in the month and it's now about half over), and because it was so short so far, you get an extra-special super bonus section!
Now we will address the question of how to ask for help. Not just how to phrase it politely, like your mommy should have taught you, but how to lay the groundwork, so that you will likely get a good helpful response.
Eric S. Raymond wrote a wonderful essay titled "How To Ask Questions The Smart Way". He's best known in the computer world, and the essay is mainly aimed at getting technical help from "hackers" (rant on the media mangling of that word, omitted). However, the principles are pretty much universal. In fact, if you apply them outside that realm, you'll meet with even greater success. To break it down, way down: