The small daily habits that made me better at Linux than memorizing commands ever did I used to think becoming good at Linux meant learning more commands every day. So I did what most beginners do: watched tutorials saved cheat sheets copied terminal commands practiced random labs It felt productive. But when real problems appeared, I struggled badly. A broken service. A permission issue. A failed deployment. Suddenly, all those memorized commands felt useless. That’s when I realized something important: Linux is not a memory game. It’s a thinking game. And the biggest improvement in my Linux journey came from changing my daily habits, not my learning resources. * The Problem With “Learning Linux” * Most people approach Linux like this: “What new thing should I learn today?” But Linux is not just knowledge. It’s pattern recognition. You don’t become good because you know 500 commands.…