When you hear the word “math,” what pops into your head?
For most of us, it’s a jumble of numbers, equations, and that gnawing anxiety from high school algebra. If you’re like me—and especially if you grew up with dyscalculia or math phobia—you might have spent years believing you “just aren’t a math person.”
But here’s the secret nobody tells you:
Math and arithmetic are not the same.
Arithmetic is the rote memorization of steps: adding, subtracting, multiplying, dividing. Math, in its truest sense, is the art of solving problems—of recognizing patterns, thinking strategically, and finding creative ways through complexity.
Let’s get real:
Most of us are not human calculators, and we shouldn’t have to be. My own journey with dyscalculia taught me that my value isn’t measured in rapid-fire mental math, but in my ability to see connections others might miss. It’s not about tallying up receipts in your head or solving quadratic equations on demand—it’s about asking, “How can I make this work? What tools can I use? How can I make this easier?”
When I started my own business, Markit, I realized I was doing more “math” than ever—but not the kind that happens on a calculator.
Instead, I was untangling systems, automating workflows, and creating elegant solutions for values-driven teams. My brain wasn’t adding numbers—it was building bridges.
Here’s where the magic happens:
The stuff that stressed us out in school—the times tables, the endless calculations—that’s arithmetic.
And the good news?
We now have the power to automate nearly all of it.
When you delegate arithmetic to automation, you free your brain for strategic, creative thinking—the kind of “math” that actually drives results.
If you’ve ever found a shortcut, optimized a workflow, or solved a gnarly problem with creativity, congratulations: You’re a math person.
Arithmetic can be outsourced to robots. But your creative problem-solving—your real “math”—is irreplaceable.
So the next time someone says, “I’m not a math person,” smile and tell them:
“Neither am I. I’m a problem solver.”