We hear it all the time in sports: the things we can't teach that separates one athlete from another; when, all things being physically equal, something makes one person better than the other. The intangibles. The unreachable things.
Is it this way in fishing? I think probably most of us a really good anglers. Few of us are professionals, and certainly not me, but I'd say most of us have something most other fishermen don't have. I've spent a few years reading and getting to vaguely know many of you, and we're a pretty experienced bunch. We're all here for a reason, and we quarrel over this and that because we care, while the average person doesn't really care about this or that.
There are intangibles and unteachables that separates the addicted from the weekend warriors. We all have "something" that can't be taught, hence why we "got good", persevere, suffer through the hard times and terrible weather, and are never willing to give up.
What do you think you have that makes you a good angler? For me it's scanning a body of water and knowing where to find fish. And then it's the things we can't see but an enthusiast can envision it. I become one with the water. All my senses are in tune. Every bump, every nick of something, anytime something is brushed, it paints a picture of the underwater world in my head. I can vividly imagine what I'm fishing and how a fish would relate to it. It's something unteachable.
This is sort of a late night spiritual thread with perhaps a splash of ego boost, but I'm serious. We all have something that makes us different than the rest, even if we aren't quite gods (pros).