Sunday, April 29, 2018

348 – Jocko Willink

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Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Here’s What I Learned…

My first memory is being beaten.

I had taken a magic marker, snuck out of my house, and wrote all over the outside wall of my friend’s house.

His mom called my mom (or dad, I forget) and the first thing I actually remember is being hit.

I don’t remember anything good from that day. Maybe dinner was good. Maybe TV was good. Maybe I played with my friends that day. I don’t remember the good things.

The bad things I always remember. I remember peeing in my pants on the second day of school and everyone laughing.

I remember, years later, so many girls I wanted to date completely rejecting me. On two occasions even running as fast as they could to get away from me.

I had glasses, acne, braces, tangled hair, cysts down one side of my face, and I wasn’t good at sports.

Or a girl, in dance class, saying to her friends, “You don’t have to touch him. Just put your hands one foot from his.”

I guess this is bullying. But some bully is also: a Jimmy B (or Billy A or Matt F or…) coming up to me from behind, hitting me as hard as possible in the back so I fall and all my books go every place.

I couldn’t handle it so I stopped going to school. I’d leave my house and pretend to go to the bus stop but instead run across a field to the highway and take public transportation into New York City.

I wanted to make money so I’d try to find empty cans of soda in the garbage that you could redeem for 5 cents a can at any grocery store.

I got super into the occult because I wanted to cast spells on my enemies and use the powers of my mind to get girls to like me.

Nothing worked.

I just wanted my life to change.


I don’t want to talk about all my ups and downs. We’ve all had them.

We’re often “stuck” and we want to be “unstuck”.

We often end up in a job that society approved of, our parents approved of, our teachers and friends approved of. But after years, we are unhappy. Or rather, I was unhappy.

It’s hard for me to learn by just looking at my past experiences. Because how can I think in new ways?

Easy: I read a lot and I then get to call anyone I want and have them on my podcast and ask all the questions I want.

From Richard Branson to Tony Robbins to Jewel to Tiffany Haddish to Kareem Abdul Jabbar to Garry Kasparov, Yoda (literally…I had the man who played Yoda on my podcast) and so many more.

 

(Richard Branson, when he’s taking time off from being on my podcast)

Here’s some of what I learned:

  • Who you are with is who you are. Don’t spend time with people who are toxic to your daily life.
  • “Kaizen” / Consistency. Get better every day at the things you love. 1% per day compounds into 3800% per year. That’s a lot of improvement compared to what 99.999% of the population does.

 

  • Freedom is NOT depending on the decisions of others for your personal improvement in all areas of life.
  • Gratitude and Fear can’t exist in the same mind at the same time.
  • All decisions are either Growth decisions or Fear decisions. Only Growth decisions point in the same direction as your inner compass for success.
  • +, -, = Spend time with people who are “+”, better than you so you can learn from them. “=” a peer group who challenges you that you can grow with and “-”, a group that can learn from you.
  • Everything is Energy. To succeed or be creative or have impact on the world or be a better parent or spouse or friend, you need energy. Physical, emotional, creative, spiritual.
  • Physical Health: Eat. Move. Sleep. These are nature’s magic ingredients to maximize your physical health.
  • Emotional Health: Being around people who love you.
  • Creative Health: Practice writing down ten ideas a day every day. Doesn’t matter if they are good or bad. After I did this for just three months I felt like I had a new superpower compared with “ordinary citizens”

 

  • Spiritual Health: Do not let the regrets of the past, or anxieties of the future, steal from the only moment which truly is real – which is right now.
  • Give and you will receive. This doesn’t mean “give money” (although it could). It means have a mindset of giving, without ANY thought of scarcity, and without any thought of it being transactional, and amazing things will happen. Always look to help.
  • Integrity. It’s hard to live. But if you don’t have integrity, then you live a double life. It’s hard enough to live one life. Living two lives (or three, or four, or five) will destroy your energy, make you sick and unhappy.
  • Example: When Jewel was living in her car, she was offered a million dollar record deal. She turned it down! How come? Because it was against her own integrity of the kind of music she wanted to create. Every day, understanding your values and what your integrity is and being unafraid to express that integrity in a kind way is the key to everything.

 

  • Questioning. Everything we think we know and understand. All of our “facts” will change every few years (or faster). The person who questions the most will succeed the fastest.
  • Example: The other day I was with my daughter and she was showing me something in her History textbook. I asked her, “is this really true?” She said, “it’s in the textbook.” So we started doing research. It turned out her textbook is completely wrong. The benefits of questioning? We spent quality time together, we learned how to be skeptical over a widely accepted fact, we learned how to follow our questioning and do research. And least of all, we learned something new but with the ability to still question it.
  • Everybody is Irrational. Some people believe “X”. Some people believe the opposite of “X”. It’s 50–50. Over 100s of decisions and ideas, it makes sense that people are probably correct only a very small percentage of the time. If you just assume that most people are irrational it’s much easier to navigate the waters of success and failure.
  • It’s My Fault. In 2000 I lost money in the stock market (like many). Everyone encouraged me to sue my stockbroker. I said, “no way. It’s my fault.” I made all the decisions, even the decision to take his advice. I do standup comedy. When the crowd is silent I often hear comedians say, “ugh, it’s a bad crowd.” I’ve even seen a known (but not successful) comedian curse out the crowd for not laughing. I always assume I am doing something wrong and failing to connect to the crowd (or failing to deal with the psychology of a silent crowd). There’s always something to learn when I say, “It’s my fault”. I used to play chess competitively. I could only get better by studying my losses. In chess there’s a saying, “Only the good players get lucky”.
  • Process > Outcome. If my process is good – if I’m doing my best to question, learn, read, follow the examples of those better, practice, small improvements, keep energy up, etc etc – then I can’t predict the outcome.
  • How come? Because tomorrow I will be better than today and I will understand the possible outcomes even better. I never focus on outcome. Just process. Process is pleasure. Process is today and in the moment. Outcome is always a fantasy in the future.
  • Money is a byproduct of all of the above.
  • Romance is a byproduct of all of the above. Don’t outsource your self-esteem to a romantic partner. It’s hard enough to handle their own self-esteem, let alone two. You will be destroyed.
  • Health is a byproduct of all of the above.
  • All obstacles have opportunities. Read “Man’s Search for Meaning” for the most obvious example of this. This book (among with about 200 others) is like my bible.

I’d like to say I live my life by all of the items on this list.

So I will.

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Monday, April 23, 2018

345 – Aubrey Marcus:

 

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Thursday, April 19, 2018

Six Books This Month That Changed My Life

(in a book store on Lincoln Road in Miami earlier this month)

 

My 20s sucked.

In the mornings I would take a suit out of my one garbage bag and put it on and walk to work.

I smelled. My roommate smelled. And I was bad at my job.

And then I started reading. I read as much as I could. I read every day. I read for enjoyment. I read to improve. My life changed. Sometimes it got worse.

But I live in an amazing life. I’m not afraid to admit it. It’s not bragging if it’s true.

When you read a book, you’re a vampire. You suck the entire life out of the author. If it’s a good book, if it’s meaningful.

Every month I read books that change my life.


I don’t believe a life has a purpose. Tomorrow I will know more than today.

So how can I guess today what sort of purpose I will have tomorrow?

This I know:

Life can be both easy and a struggle. How the struggle can be fought with grace. How others learned to develop that grace.

How the struggle can transform your life into one of ease.

This is learned from books. I learn from my own experiences. But my experiences are just one person. Books help me learn from thousands of people.

Before I give my list, here is my advice on reading books:

MEMORY. I remember about 1–2% of every book I read. That’s all I’ve ever needed to change my life.

QUESTIONS. When I finish a book, I usually have more questions than answers.

Does the book resonate with me? What can I change in my life? What questions did the book not answer that maybe I can?

ACTIONS. If I read a good book, I try to take action. I try to take risk. If I believe in the ideas in the book (and all of the books I am about to recommend, I believe in) then I want to take action quickly to start executing those ideas.

Here’s the books I’ve read this past month. In other words, they might be the best books I’ve ever read:

 

SKIN IN THE GAME – by Nassim Taleb.

The idea that your actions should contain risk. Then you will have more integrity, and more impact.

 

THINKING IN BETS – Annie Duke, one of the best poker players of all time.

The idea: we have to make thousands of decisions a day. No decision is black or white.

Make decisions the way a poker player does. What is the value of each of the many possible outcomes and what are their rough probabilities.

Make the decision with the highest expected long-term, even if it has low probability.

If you continually do that, you will have a successful life.

 

FACTFULNESS – by Hans Rosling

Bill Gates calls this his favorite book.

The idea: the world is better than we all thought it was. And it’s getting better every year.

Hans Rosling explains why this is the case and proves it’s the case.

Why is this important?

Turn away from the fear that everyone constantly wants to spread that things are always getting worse.

Join the forces of good in making the world a better place. The technology, the opportunity, the innovation, and the money are there. Understanding the truths of the world gives you the tools to succeed as opposed to succumbing to the terror that mainstream news wants to spread.

(a chart from the book)

 

12 RULES FOR LIFE – Jordan Peterson

I don’t know what to say here. I’m on my third read of it in the past month and I’ve even had Jordan on my podcast to ask him about the book.

It’s hard to say what it boils down to. But basically: live a life of integrity. Be the sort of person that is authentic and life will succumb to your wishes rather than constantly trying to please the wishes of others.

 

(which of these 12 rules do you think applies most to you?)

 

JUST THE FUNNY PARTS – Nell Scovell

The idea: I love television and Nell Scovell has written for the past 30 years on some of my favorite TV shows.

Recently, I’ve been an advisor to the now airing TV show “Billions” in it’s 3rd Season on Showtime. It was an eye-opening experience for me and like a masterclass on screenwriting.

Nell provides that same level of masterclass inspiration describing how she created TV shows, stories, jokes, and wrote for such a wide range of personalities and stories. I loved it.

Interesting to note: Nell also co-wrote “Lean In” with Sheryl Sandberg.

 

OWN THE DAY, OWN YOUR LIFE – Aubrey Marcus

From the benefits of cold showers, to the benefits of sex, to increasing productivity at work, to having the best sleep – this book breaks the day down and uses scientific studies to how to optimize each hour of the day.

And I will say, so far so good on the cold showers. Although painful.

Oh, and I’m mentioned on page 135 of the book. Thanks Aubrey!

(In the book, page 135:)

COMING ALIVE – Barry Michels

Barry gives four tools for igniting creativity and fighting your inner demons.

I loved Barry’s first book, “The Tools” and have actively used those tools to make my life better.

In this book, I’ve already played around with all of four techniques but, in particular, the “MOTHER” one has been useful to me.


I can mention more, I’m a book addict:

Worry” by Ed Hallowell

Future of Humanity” by Michio Kaku (which you can read for the topic but even more interesting is to peer into the mind of a constantly questioning genius),

F*ck Whales” by Maddox (funny, but also great case studies on how to be skeptical and have fun with it),

I’m sitting by the pool at the Beverly Hills Hotel, writing this post in a cabana.

I don’t really like sun or pools but I like people-watching. Sometimes I write a sentence and then I look at all the people and listen to their conversations.

And after this post I think I’m going to read.

I’m going to finish reading, “Worry”.

(trying not to worry too much)

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344 – Barry Michels: This is What’s Really in Your Subconscious Mind

 

 

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Monday, April 16, 2018

343 – Tony Rock: The Process to Get ANY Idea Off the Ground

I had to mention that he was Chris Rock’s brother. I would’ve felt weird if I didn’t.

But Chris Rock is not Tony Rock’s mentor. In fact, they rarely talk about stand up together.

Tony always wanted to be a comedian. From the moment he listened to Richard Pryor, George Carlin and Bill Cosby, he was inspired. But he didn’t know them.

When his brother started doing stand up, it changed everything for him.

“The guy in the next room is doing it. Now it’s real,” Tony said.Because those other guys (the ones Tony grew up admiring) were just ideas to him.

He was inspired by Chris. And because of him, he became immersed in the comedy scene.

“I was a fly on the wall,” he said. “And I learned everyone has their own slant on this thing.”

Now, 24 years later Tony’s made this “idea” of comedy into a reality. And a career. So I wanted to know his process. And figure out how anyone can take these same techniques and apply it to their own project or side hustle. This is how you take your idea from the drawing board and put it in action, RIGHT NOW.

Here are 11 lessons I learned from Tony Rock:

1. Build Up The Habit (Through Repetition)

Tony gets asked for a lot of advice. And he always gives it. Happily.

“Every young comic that asks me advice, my number one answer is write everyday. Just get in the habit of writing everyday,” he said.

And this is true for every skill or any project you want to start. The first thing is showing up. Show up everyday and you’ll have a habit.

“You might look at it later on and go, ‘This is garbage,’ but you’re in the habit of doing this action everyday. Once you get in action of doing it. Then you’re going to do it without even thinking about it. It’s going to be second nature. Do it everyday.”

2. Collaborate

After Tony writes, he takes his ideas or jokes straight to his friends.

“We try and pass ideas around. We pan for gold. We try to see if it’s a nugget,” he said.

“Now we have a nugget, now we have something to work with. And then we just try to build off of that little nugget and we try and make it this big piece that’s going to change the world,” Tony said.

3. Immediately Take it to the Stage / Take Action

Not everyone has a stage. But you do have some action step you want to take.

Tony told me a joke he’s working on. It’s about women.

“Women love to get dressed up. But you know what women love more than getting dressed up? Taking their clothes off. Not in a sexual sense. They just like to go to work dressed up and then first thing a girl does when she comes home is kicks her shoes off and takes her jacket off. They just want to get comfortable and wear sweatpants and socks. They want to look bummy in the house.”

Tony passes this idea around with his friends. That’s step one.

Step 2: He gets out of his head. And into action.

“I’ll take that piece and go on stage because I need to hear it around the room. Sometimes I’ll write a joke and go to the comedy club that night and tell it just because I need to hear it in the setting. Because that’s is where it lives.”

“In my house I might think, ‘Yeah this is really funny,’ but if it doesn’t live in a comedy club then it doesn’t work,” Tony said.

4. Get Feedback

He told me he’d read the joke right off the napkin. He wants to hear the reactions, the cackles, the silence, to give him feedback.

“When you’re on stage 9 times out of 10 the audience, they’re guinea pigs,” Tony said. He uses the audience to get the joke where it needs to be for bigger shows, for the cameras.

5. When You’re Asked to the Big Leagues…

Tony has the opposite problem of most people. He was promoted too soon. And scared.

One day, (after working in comedy 5 years or something), Tony was pulled off the “featured act” and moved up to headlining.

It’s kind of a long story… after he “passed” all the clubs in NYC, he moves on to the Tri-state area. He was just featuring, but people wanted his autograph, too, because he was Chris Rock’s brother. So basically, the club promoters were like, ‘Oh! We can take him to a headliner and bill it as “Chris Rock’s Brother”’. That’s the short of it.

“I will be 100% honest with you, at the time I did not have the material,” he said. “But you can’t get called up to the major leagues in baseball and say, ‘No no no. I can’t hit the curveball, yet. I’ll just stay here a little while longer and then I’ll tell you when I’m ready to go up there’. You gotta go when they say you gotta go.”

He made it work. He started his sets with half written material and half crowdwork. And it worked for him. It forced him to find something to make funny in the room on the spot. He worked the muscle. “Now I can make anything funny at anytime in the room,” he said.

“I’d come home to the city and go on stage at The Strip. I had a 15 minute set. And I would try to do my whole set without telling one written joke,” Tony said.

He’s done it for so many years that anything can happen in the room and Tony will be able to make it funny in a second. He had to.

“When your back’s against the wall, it changes everything,” he said.

6. Use Your Own Perspective

So many comedians are focused on the premise/punchline set-up, instead of having a perspective and then letting jokes come out of that. I’ve noticed that the most famous comedians, like Chris Rock or Dave Chappelle, are known for their perspectives. This is how they gained such a big fan base. When something happens in the news, people are going to wonder,”What will Dave Chappelle think about this?”.

People anticipate what they’re going to say on certain things as opposed to the guy who’s just funny. You’ve seen him once, you don’t need to see him again.

“There’s no food for my brain. It doesn’t feed my soul,” Tony said.

“The best comedy specials are not one hour of comedy. They’re 40 minutes of comedy and 15 minutes of, ‘Okay, now that I have your attention, I have to say this. I have to deliver this message while I have this platform,’” Tony said.

And this becoming more and more relevant as our “selves” become commodities in the world. We have reputations that precede us with social media. So perspective is more important that entertainment. Now more than ever.

7. Be Observant (that’s how you gain perspective)

When Tony’s on the road, he pays attention. He tries to get a joke from the town he’s travelling in. That’s how he’ll open the show. I asked for an example. So he told me this:

“I was in Baltimore one night. And there was a guy that robbed a gas station and stole all the scratch off tickets. He got away. Then, 3 hours later a guy walks in with a winning scratch off ticket. It was the same guy.”

So he opened with THAT joke.

He paid attention. And then took it a step further. He added perspective. Because he trusts his own lens. That’s hard to do. Insecurity is a killer of opinion.

8. Find The Human Spirit

I wanted to know the difference between humor and stand up. Because I believe they’re very different. And Tony does too.

Humor can be seeing someone slip and fall on ice. ”That’s humor, it tickles your funny bone,”he said.

But stand up is something else. “Stand up is public speaking, news reporting, it’s thought provoking, it’s heartfelt, it’s reflection,” Tony said, “It’s the human spirit.”

We changed the subject really quickly. Because I felt the speed of learning was faster than the clock. I had more questions. So it’s hard to pull more meaning out of it, when he said, “it’s the human spirit.” But I think it’s a feeling. You know it when it’s missing. And you know when it’s with you.

The only solution I have for myself… is to laugh more. And feel it in my bones.

9. Embrace Your Uniqueness

Tony has 7 brothers and 2 sisters. His grandfather was a preacher. No one else has that kind of story.

“Your uniqueness sets you apart,” Tony said.

And this applies to everyone. Even me. We started talking about how I gave away all my possessions and lived out of Airbnbs. He was shocked. Because I’ve never talked about it in my stand up.

But I never thought about it. I guess because I felt like people wouldn’t understand or be able to relate.

“You’re judging your audience,” Tony said.

He’s right. But I also learned that I’m judging myself…

We all have different quirks to our lives. I’m going to start embracing mine.

10. Stay Relatable to Your Audience

Tony’s getting more and more successful. Which means it could get harder to relate to the audience. Because he’s growing, and writing new material. But will they still like him?

This can be a struggle for anyone, really. A boss talking to a new hire. A dad talking to a son. Different ages, experiences, cultures, classes, genders… we’re as good as connecting as we are bad at it.

So I wanted to know how Tony talks to people. Even as he grows. This is what he told me:

“I’m still the guy from Brooklyn that didn’t have anything growing up. So I think there’s a level of honesty and a level of realness when I’m talking in the room,.I’m talking for us,” he said. “I’m not talking down to you. I’m talking to you like I’m from there, too.”

Remember your roots. That’s how you relate. He taught me that you have to be a combination of where you came from and where you are, but not necessarily “where you’re going.” Because that’s unknown.

11. One Love Opens Many Doors

I started with a blog. Actually, I started with wanting to kill myself. But then I wrote a blog. I wrote everyday. People read it. I was invited to write on other sites. Then I started interviewing people. I put it online. It’s called “a podcast.” (Maybe you’ve heard of it.)

Then I got invited to speak at Google, Airbnb Open, and at colleges, conferences. I wrote books. I’ve written 10 bad books and 5 good books (or something else. I’ve lost count).

Tony does a lot, too. But it all started from one thing. I started with writing. He started with standup. And that one love is what opens all the other doors.

I feel like more and more people want to be discovered. No one wants to apply to a job. No one wants a resume. We want a bio.

“Stand up is the reason everything else is possible. 90% of all the good things that have happened to me in my career happened because somebody saw me doing standup,” Tony said.

Now he’s on CBS’ “Living Biblically,” BET’s “Black Card Revoked”, “Apollo Live” and “NBA – The Warm Up”.

He got on Will Smith’s show “All of Us” because somebody saw him on stage doing comedy.

Start with one thing. Set a target. Do that thing. Because if you find what you love, good opportunities will follow.

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The Ultimate Cheat Sheet To Minimalism

One day last year the police were banging on my door, “Open up!” and the owner of the Airbnb I was staying at texted me, “Don’t open!”

Another time I was staying in an apartment owned by the head of the Central Bank of a major industrial country. I would try to figure out what she was going to do.

Another time I stayed in the house of the singer of the #1 song in the world ten years earlier.

And another time I stayed in the home of a photographer who only photographed red planes but owned an island and four other apartments. And nothing showed up on Google about him. Not even his name.

Another time I left a bad situation because all I had to do was pick up my one bag, walk out, and disappear.

Everyone has secrets.

I lived in over 50 different places after I threw out all of my possessions and started living in just Airbnbs.

I learned a lot about people. Mostly people disappointed me. Or made me laugh at how ludicrous it is to try and scotch tape a life together.

Most of us are just running from something. Including me.

People said to me, “It must be so freeing to be such a minimalist.”

No, it wasn’t freeing.

And no, it wasn’t minimalism. It was often a prison to my own artificial rules.

I was often sad and lonely. And as my friend Amy said, “You’re a bit creepy.”

So I moved into an apartment and started to piece my life together again.

So….this:

MINIMALISM IS:

– FREEDOM = YOUR JOY DOESN’T DEPEND ON THE DECISIONS OF OTHERS
– RELATIONSHIPS > EXPERIENCES > POSESSIONS
– SELF-IMPROVEMENT > VALIDATION
– ONLY GET WHAT YOU NEED.
– REDUCE TIME BETWEEN BUYING AND USE
– DIVERSIFY YOUR HIERARCHIES
– HAPPINESS = REALITY / EXPECTATIONS
– CONSUMER FEWER OPINIONS AND NEWS.
– BEING AT PEACE > BEING RIGHT
– QUESTIONS > ANSWERS
– BRANDS HAVE NO VALUE

———

Explanation:

A) FREEDOM = YOUR JOY DOESN’T DEPEND ON THE DECISIONS OF OTHERS

Tyra Banks told me she once had an idea.

The idea was: “The Real World” meets “America’s Got Talent” combined with her own experience in modeling

She told her agent.

Her agent said, “No. Nobody will relate to models.”

She fired her agent and figured out how to do the idea on her own. This year is the 24th season of the most popular TV show in America: “America’s Next Top Model”.

Freedom = More opportunity.

Freedom = You meet other FREE people.

Freedom = You can express yourself to a greater number of people. You become authentic instead of catering to someone else’s checkbox.

B) RELATIONSHIPS

The past two years I’ve had many experiences: business, standup comedy, podcasting, etc. All new and wonderful experiences.

These experiences required no “things” and they made me very happy.

When your inner compass points in the way of passion, you’re going to find the other people who have a strong inner compass.

This is your tribe. These are your friends. They are your inspirations. And then you become an inspiration.

C) SELF-IMPROVEMENT > VALIDATION

The other day I had an annoying conversation with a standup comic. I don’t even know his name. He said he had been doing standup comedy for 20 years.

He said, “Don’t think you can just walk in here and rise to the top. Stay where you are. You are nothing.”

I nodded my head but didn’t listen to him.

Every day I improve. Every day I make more people laugh. I have my own set of experiences over 20 years of communicating. I am my own authentic voice.

I will never outsource my validation, my self-worth, to anyone.

I don’t want validation from someone whose name I can’t remember. I get pleasure from improving.

D) NEED

Over two years ago I threw out all of my belongings.

Everything I had accumulated in almost five decades of life.

I don’t believe in the Marie Kondo method of “keep what you love”. It’s ok to not have something you love.

Life is about accepting the imperfections, not about clinging to the perfect.

But…

I need you.

E) DIVERSIFY HIERARCHY

I want more money.

I want to write better.

I want to have more ideas.

I want to enjoy time with people I love.

I want more health.

When money is not going well, I might write. When writing is not going well, I’ll spend time with someone I love.

I used to have only one hierarchy (money) and when it went poorly, I would feel horrible. Stress would spike. I would live in chronic stress.

But now when one hierarchy is not going as well, I switch to another where I can improve and feel happy. I diversify the experiences that give me pleasure.

F) HAPPINESS = REALITY / EXPECTATIONS

Example 1: Reality might be I have $1000. The reality is hard to change.

If I think I can only be happy with $1,000,000 then I will be unhappy. Reality can take years to change. But expectations can change in a second. If I can be happy with much less, I will be happier.

Example 2: Reality might be a person weighs 300 pounds but they think they will be happy weighing 200 pounts.

If they reduce expectations that it’s not the number of pounds but a shift towards healthier lifestyle then they can start that today. The final outcome is that they end up at 200 pounds and were much happier along the way.

G) CONSUME FEWER OPINIONS

I’m 30,000 feet in the air right now.

When I was in the airport, two stations were on: MSNBC and FOX News.

Both were reporting on the same story, but the headline at the bottom was almost exactly opposite.

One opinion is definitely wrong and the other probably wrong. And tomorrow, both will be forgotten.

I’d rather be reading how to love someone better. How to be of better service to others. How I can improve myself.

Or read a story (since opinions are just bad fictions anyway) that excites me more than meaningless news events.

In the past 18 years, actual news events effected me once (9/11, when I lived around the corner from the World Trade Center).

For some people, news events effect them much more. But most people seem to think the news effects them every day. It doesn’t.

If I can consume things that can better me, it will better all the people around me, and the people around them.

A single drop of water in the middle of the ocean, will reverberate out to all shores, changing the world.

That’s just my opinion.

H) QUESTIONS > ANSWERS

Is there life after death? Is there a way to slow down aging? Is it better to be “right!” or “at peace” with a loved one? What is the best way to be of service to others? To be kind?

If you have a choice is it better to help people in war-torn countries? Or to help stop slave trafficking?

I don’t know the answers to any of these. But thinking about the questions helps make me a better person.

Or maybe not?

——-

I’m more minimalist than ever.

Because no one person can make decisions over my freedom, my self-improvement, and my relationships.

I hope I can live by this.

But… sometimes there is always the one with the key to my everything who could shut the lock and I will cry.

And that’s my choice.

The post The Ultimate Cheat Sheet To Minimalism appeared first on Altucher Confidential.



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Sunday, April 15, 2018

342 – Frank Oz: How To Create Something Original

I asked if he could do a voice for me.

“It’s fine to ask me,” Frank Oz said.

“Can you do a voice for me,” I said.

“No.”

We laughed. I already knew he was going to say no. We talked about it before we started recording. And he told me why:

“It’s too show offy, it’s too easy,” Frank said. “The characters I have are very pure. And if I did a voice of them, they wouldn’t be pure anymore.”

He went on, “They’d just be party favors, just a trick. They mean too much to me just to throw them off like that.”

I asked him more about this. About falling in love with your creation. And being happy with yourself, your art. I’ll tell you what he said. But, first, I want to reel back to the beginning. And tell you how he got discovered.

Frank’s parents were puppeteers. So he’d been around puppets his entire life. He started working with them when he was 10. He stopped when he was 18 because he wanted to become a journalist. But instead Jim Henson, who created the Muppets, wanted to work with him. He brought Frank to New York and he never left.

“How did Jim Henson know you,” I asked.

“He saw me doing a show when I was 17. And he needed a fourth performer. So he asked me to come out and work part time for 6 months,” Frank said.

He became a part of the beginning of something great. And I think there’s something magical about that.

They became the creators of “The Muppets.” And “Sesame Street.” And it exploded.

I’ve learned that creativity, productivity, efficiency and just pure joy or happiness at work or in any organization always comes from the top down. So I wanted to know what was special about Jim Henson as a leader.

Frank told me, “Everything he did was out of excitement.He just did what he felt was exciting. Not many bosses do that. And not many bosses treat you like a partner. And not many bosses are so collaborative. He valued everyone’s contribution.”

And Frank’s lucky. Because his wife saw how unique they were. She saw they had something special. A work environment where people had fun and loved each other, where people worked like hell and there were no politics. So she encouraged Frank to create a documentary about the creation of the Muppets under the visionary leadership of the late Jim Henson and how he led his team, titled, “Muppets Guys Talking”.

See, this is where the purity perimates through the creativity.

“We have a history here,” Frank said.”The spirit of how we work with Jim is alive always. I don’t care about the money. I care about people seeing how people can be working together inclusively with all different kinds of people and show how people still get along and work for one main goal, which is the quality of the project.”

They wanted to show the world how they created these characters who have characteristics that everyone can relate to. Bert and Ernie. The Cookie Monster. Miss Piggy. Grover.

“They all have their own flaws, their own insecurities, their own weirdnesses. And I think people respond to that,” Frank said.

They save people from their own terrible ideas about themselves. I’ll give you an example.

Frank told me about a woman who came up to him after she saw an interview he did at SXSW. She was crying. She couldn’t speak. Eventually, she was able to tell him… Fozzie was her hero.

“He never gave up,” she said. The woman struggled with dyslexia her whole life, but she never gave up either. She became her school’s valedictorian.

These characters are beyond human.

“It’s extraordinary,” he said.

And it was all because of Jim Henson, the team he built, and their commitment to the characters and bringing them alive.

“Most people create out of experience,” Frank said. But Jim said “I create out of innocence.”

Jim exploded puppetry completely without even knowing it because he didn’t know a thing about it. I wondered how more people can cultivate that feeling of innocence when confronted with a problem.

“It’s the toolbox of knowledge,” Frank said, “innocence creates something original.”

And that’s what Frank, Jim and the other Muppeters did for over 40 years. They created something original and relatable.

BRAIN DUMP:

Frank Oz, I grew up on you. I grew up watching the Muppets, Sesame Street and of course Star Wars.

“The voices are only 5% of it. We do the entire character. And that’s the hardest part. The physical part. The voices are just there”
They have to make sure they’re not blocking anymore, picking up the props correctly, picking up cues, not blocking the light, doing the dialogue properly
The pure performance aspects of these characters

It takes four people to do Yoda. I didn’t understand.
One is doing the eyes, one doing eyelid, one doing ears and one doing the voice

“Machines go smoothly with oil. We break down a lot.”

The Process of Creativity
How they created the characters

Frank’s wife is the producer of the documentary. And she saw something she’d never seen before. She saw a work environment where people had fun and love each other and work like yell and no politics. She wanted that to be seen. She saw the value.

Jim Henson was the boss. He passed away years ago, but his spirit is with them all always.

“We have a history here. No matter what happens to us, the spirit of how we work with Jim is alive always,” Frank said.

Their documentary, Muppet Guys Talking, is meant to explain his spirit and how he exploded puppeteering.

“I don’t care about the money. I care about people seeing how people can be working together inclusively with all different kinds of people and people still get along and work for one main goal which is the quality of the project.” – this is what they wanted to show in the documentary

I feel like creativity, productivity, efficiency and just pure joy and happiness at work or any organization always comes from the top down. I wanted to know what was special about Jim Henson as a leader.

“Everything he did was out of excitement. He just did what he felt was exciting. Not many bosses do that. And not many bosses treat you like a partner. And not many bosses are so collaborative. He valued everyone’s contribution.”

“He’s very layered.”
They created relatable characters. The Muppets. Bert and Ernie. The Cookie Monster.

A woman came up to Frank after an interview he did at SXSW and she was crying. She wanted an autographed picture, but she couldn’t even talk. She told him that Fozzie was her hero because he never gives up. The woman was dyslexic and she didn’t give up. She became valedictorian.

“It’s extraordinary,” he said.

These characters are beyond human. They have these platonic ideals of certain personality traits.

“There’s a certain aspects of society that is not accepting of people who are not considered in quotation marks normal. And none of the muppets are normal. None are straight down the middle. They all have their own flaws, their own insecurities, their own weirdnesses. And I think people respond to that.”

He was good at over committing to the role. In the first scene of “The Muppets” where Kermit the Frog’s singing his song. Jim was underwater for 10 hours in a tank to pull off that scene.

“The amazing thing with Jim was, if it was easy, everybody could do it,” Frank said.

“It’s flat out committing. And there were no limitations.” – the writers were told to do what they wanted

“Nothing is impossible.”

“Because Jim didn’t know puppets at all.”
“Most people create out of experience, he said I create out of innocence. That’s powerful. Jim created out of innocence.”
He had no experience in puppetry. “So out of innocence came originality.”
“Jim exploded puppetry completely without even knowing it because he didn’t know a thing about it.”
I wanted to know other examples of creating out of innocence.

“Purity and innocence is rare.”

How can more people cultivate more of that feeling of innocence when confronted with a problem?
“The big toolbox of knowledge. Innocence creates something original.”

“It’s not easy for everyone to have, it’s trying to find that germ of who you are inside before the world glommed onto you” 39m

“There are some people who have put away that what they love to make money and a living. Trying to go back to that.”

“I believe struggle is the most important thing. Without struggle you don’t feel satisfied with your success.”

They skipped the middle man. They didn’t go through a big company like Netflix or Amazon to sell their movie.

“It continues the spirit of the muppets. We became scrappy instead. It carries it all the way through. People can be direct to us.”

 

Links and Resources

  • Watch Frank’s documentary: “Muppet Guys Talking: Secrets Behind the Show the Whole World Watched” only available on muppetguystalking.com for $10
  • Frank directs the off broadway production In & Of Itself playing at the Daryl Roth Theatre in NYC

Also Mentioned

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Wednesday, April 11, 2018

THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF MY DAY: A Choose Yourself Day

Aubrey Marcus’s step-dad invented an artificial vagina.

His step-dad’s pregnant wife wasn’t having sex with him. This made him very unhappy.

So he refitted a flashlight with some wet, spongy thing and called it a “fleshlight”.

I love this story because it takes something that felt very upsetting to me for some reason and made it seem like a public service.

I started laughing and Aubrey told me, “It was really amazing to see the letters come in. ‘This device has saved my marriage’. The Fleshllight became the best-selling adult male product of all time.”

Well, I’m an idiot for even trying to judge. I’m always an idiot when I judge.

Even when I’m judging myself an idiot, I’m probably an idiot. Which sounds idiotic.

Aubrey wrote the book, “Own Your Day, Own Your Life”. How to live an optimal day in terms of health, happiness, productivity, love, relaxation, and much more.

I read it. I loved it. And I asked Aubrey a ton of questions about it.

I either hate a book or LOVE it. “Like”, the basic grammar of social media, feels like a mediocre emotion to me.

One of the benefits of having a podcast is I can read a book and if I have more questions I can call the author, see when they will be in NY, and invite them on my podcast so I can ask whatever I want.

First, I watched Aubrey’s other interviews. He did a good one with Tim Ferriss. So right in the beginning of my podcast with him I told people to watch Tim’s podcast.

The worst podcasts are the ones that just repeat what every other podcast and article says.

I like to take my guests out of their media messages and stories. I want to have real conversations.

I want to make a new friend. You can’t make new friends just repeating the same stuff they said elsewhere.

So I asked about the Fleshlight. Then I asked him how much money he made.

Then I asked about cold showers.

I’ve had on about 50 guests telling me about their ideal day.

I’ve had on Rich Roll who is an ultra iron man athlete. I’ve had on Sanjiv Chopra who wrote about the five keys to health.

I’ve had on Dan Buettner to talk about the “blue zones” where people live over 100 with high quality of life. What makes them different?

I’ve had on Aaron Carrol who writes about our wrong assumptions about foods on everything from fats to MSG to alcohol, etc.

Tim Ferris told me his optimal days to achieve peak performance.

I’ve had on Arianna Huffington (twice) to talk about sleep and Jesse Itzler who trained for a month with a Seal living in his house. I’ve had on Tony Robbins, Tim Kennedy, Dan Harris, Sean Stephenson, and on and on to talk to me about how to live an optimal healthy life.

Aubrey’s book is great because I felt it gathered many of the information from so many of my podcasts and sliced it in a new way: how to live for 24 straight hours using science to determine the healthiest way to live each hour.

I loved it.

But I don’t live it.

Here’s my day today. Some of it comes directly from Aubrey’s book because I’m going to try it.

Some of it comes from doing 50-100 podcasts where the healthiest people in the world say the same thing.

Some of it has been my routine for 18 years. Trial and error (much error) has helped me figure out my ideal day.

But it changes every day.

Each podcast involves me reading one to five books by the author, watching other interviews they did, and then asking 50-300 questions during the podcast to clarify things I didn’t understand.

I wasn’t always healthy.

I was 20 lbs heavier two years ago. I had constant stomach aches every morning. I had chronic anxiety which would effect my sleep and my decision making.

Two years ago I had so much stress over a breakup that I started seeing “floaters” in my left eye and part of my left leg went numb for months when I coughed in the wrong way.

For years I’d get tired in about five minutes if I did any physical activity at all.

Now I’m healthier. But, of course, I’d be pretty cool with it if I died tomorrow.

My kids would be sad. But I’ve been a good dad. And my friends and the people I love would be sad. But I’ve done good by them.

Why not leave at the top?

This is my day today.

Because I’m easily suggestible, some of my new habits are from yesterday’s podcast with Aubrey Marcus and his book.

I hope his ideas work, because some of them are painful.

Some of my habits are things that have been working for me since about 2010 or 2002.

And some of my habits (particularly eating habits) are from podcasts scattered across my last 350.

MORNING:

A) WAKE UP WITH THE SUN

Jordan Peterson suggests waking up the same time each day. Arianna Huffington and Sean Stephenson suggests eight hours a day.

Normally I go to sleep around 10pm so I can wake up around 6pm. But since I now do standup comedy many nights, I don’t always wake up around 6pm if I’m going to get eight hours.

But today I woke up around 7pm. I got about 7 hours of sleep.

B) MOVE: I did 30 pushups. Aubrey makes the excellent point that “movement is medicine” so why not start the day moving.

C) WATER: Aubrey makes another excellent point: “If you slept seven hours, that’s at least seven hours without water. You’re probably dehydrated and that’s a problem since the body is 70% water.”

Water reduces anxiety, clears inflammation, fuels the brain, etc. I might be slightly misquoting him but others say this as well (Hal Elrod in his “Miracle Morning” and on my podcast).

I drank a liter of water in the first half hour.

D) SUPPLEMENTS.

I used that water to take supplements. I often forget to take supplements because I usually don’t drink water in the morning.

I took, Zinc, Calcium, Magnesium, probiotics, “Super Digestive Enzymes”, Vitamin D3, DHEA, and something called GabaCore, which I don’t know why I’m taking but helps me relax a little.

Magnesium has helped me avoid a problem I’ve had recently where my leg cramps at night.

And I take the probiotics and enzymes because there is more serotonin in the stomach than in the brain.

According to Loretta Breuning on my podcast (and Aubrey), serotonin is the neurochemical that gives a great feeling of well-being. It makes you feel like you are an integral part of the tribe of humans. That you belong.

People say, “I don’t know why I think this but I feel it in my gut”.

They say it like that because the gut is six million years older than the brain and there’s 100 million of this powerful neurochemical in the gut. More than in the brain.

So taking care of the gut is important.

E) BRUSH TEETH AND LISTERINE

I haven’t been to a doctor in at least 32 years now. Maybe a little longer. (please don’t leave a comment saying I need some sort of prostate test. I’m not going to do it).

But I have been to a dentist (I know, I know, dentists are doctors. But you get it).

I’ve had massive dentals pains in the past 30 years.

The leading cause of suicide in the 1800s was dental pain.

I’m too lazy to floss (I know I need to do it. One thing at a time) but I brush my teeth about three times a day and use listerine to kill off any bacteria.

I also put listerine on my forehead because it tends to get oily there and I don’t want adult acne on my forehead.

F) BREATHE THEN SHOWER BUT WITH A TWIST

Ok, Aubrey, I did it.

I went in the shower, I took about 30 deep breaths to calm myself down.

And then I turned on the shower to maximum cold and stayed there for 20 seconds. To be fair, I went about 2/3 the way to maximum for 10 seconds, and then went maximum for 20.

It was painful. I told Aubrey yesterday, “If you are wrong about this, I’m going to hunt you down and kill you.”

Wim Hof Method , who I should I have on my podcast, recommends the cold shower. There are enormous benefits. But maybe most important, if you can handle 20 seconds of super cold shower, you can probably handle anything.

Wim Hof has climbed Mt. Everest without a shirt.

And there’s over 300 clinical studies showing the benefits of starting the day with a max cold shower.

I did it. And you know what? It actually feels great.

I only like doing things where I can feel the results immediately. I don’t like to take supplements because you can’t always feel the results right away.

But I took the cold shower two hours ago and I still feel it. It’s like this weird glow inside my body.

Can I handle anything the day has to throw at me?

I have no clue. But I can definitely notice the difference from one of these showers, I feel it right now, and I plan to do it again tomorrow.

G) MOVE MORE

I live on the sixth floor. I never take the elevator if I’m by myself. I run down the stairs or run up the stairs several times a day.

I hate the gym. So whatever I can do, I try to exercise in ways to avoid the gym.

William Beteet, who has been on my podcast, says that’s ok but the only thing to really reduce anxiety without medication is to get on a treadmill for 20 minutes.

And Tim Ferriss told me to exercise with kettlebells. Aubrey Marcus said the same thing.

I’m not going to do it today. But maybe I’ll start at some point. I know it’s important. I just hate the gym.

H) LIGHT

I took a 20 minute walk outside. “Light is important,” Aubrey said. I forget why but I guess just like light is important for plant growth and the growth of most living things on the planet, it’s probably good for us.

Light has Vitamin D. And many people who don’t get enough light get “Seasonal Affective Disorder”, i.e. depression.

So I took a walk because it’s getting warmer and the sun is out and I wanted light first thing.

And I try not to talk on the sidewalk (although that’s hard in NY). Nassim Nicholas Taleb once told me on the podcast to try to walk on grass like our ancient ancestors to build up personal anti fragility.

I need to work on my personal anti-fragility.

I) FOOD

I don’t keep food in my apartment (see my article “The Airbnb Diet”).

Any food I buy, I eat. And I can’t help myself: I buy snacks. It’s impossible to order a bag of potato chips in a restaurant.

This is the only thing I know for sure about food. Processed carbs and sugars are bad.

I can’t explain the science why. People say, “it causes inflammation”, which is bad for all sorts of reasons.

But everyone from Peter Thiel to Jordan Peterson to Sanjiiv Chopra to Tim Ferriss many more has said sugar is evil on my podcast.

This is probably the one food decision that everyone agrees on.

I ordered eggs and avocado. Eggs for the protein and because it feels filling. And avocado because of the “healthy fats”. I still don’t know what that means. But most people I’ve trusted on the podcast say, “Avocado is the perfect food”.

I also ordered coffee.

J) READ

I shut off computer and phone. I can’t help but be distracted if the computer or phone is on. Much easier to just shut off temptations.

I then read. I read, in this order:

1) a GREAT non-fiction book.
2) a spiritual-oriented book
3) a GREAT fiction book.

The non-fiction book will teach me things.
The spiritual book makes me feel good and gives me tools for the day.
The fiction book teaches me to be a better writer.

I’ve been writing for 28 years but maybe 1/10 the writer I would like to be.

Today’s books:

1) “Factfulness” by Han Rosling (Bill Gates says its his favorite book ever)

2) I read a book by Timothy Keller on “Prayer”. I love Eastern philosophy books or Eckhart Tollle style books BUT I also thing the underlying philosophy of Christianity is beautiful and lately I’ve been replacing my traditional notions of meditation with ideas about prayer.

3) “The Largesse of the Sea Maiden” by Denis Johnson. My favorite author of short stories by far.

I’ve read his first collection of stories over 300 times. This is his second collection. Sadly, he just died. I’m actually very sad about it.

Such a gentle soul in his writing. Someone who tried to figure out the world by experiencing it and then writing it. And never quite figuring it out.

Sometimes the non-fiction book will be motivated by whatever podcast I’m doing that week. So yesterday and day before I was obsessively reading Aubrey’s book.

But today, I read whatever was next on my list. And it’s so interesting I feel like my brain is expanding. That’s the definition of a good non-fiction book. I won’t read a non-fiction book unless I get that feeling.

Else it’s useless.

How much do I remember from a good book?

About 1%.

2% if I take notes.

K) WRITE

I’m writing this post. Or I’ll write 10 ideas and then write a post

But often I’m writing either posts, books, 10 ideas, answers on Quora, articles for any of the businesses I’m involved in, or even reviewing scripts (I am an adviser on Showtime’s “Billions” although this season’s writing is over thank god and I don’t plan on doing that ever again).

I used to publish every day. Now I don’t.

I’m sort of embarrassed now because in my post archives I’ve written over 2200+ posts in the past few years.

But I also have about 1000+ drafts. And some of them are VERY embarrassing. And I forgot that I’ve hired a team of people to help me sort through all my posts.

BUT they can see the drafts.

OH NO!

L) THERAPY

I love therapy.

This is my second session of the week.

Life is pretty hard. And as one of my podcast guests, Gary Gulman, has said: It’s Every. Single. Day.

I use a therapist the way someone would use a statistician.

I’m not trying to find the root causes of my problems. I’m not sure how useful that is.

I know some of the roots:

a) the usual stuff about parents.

b) my insecurities from when I was 12. We are always 12 at heart and all of those insecurities stick with us (“I’m ugly”, “Nobody will like me”, “I have to be smarter than everyone else to have self-worth”, etc.)

c) trauma from breakups (people cheating, people with tempers, people beating me up, breakups that I wanted to do but were too afraid to do, etc)

d) trauma from losing all of my money several times.

But here’s how I work with a therapist (and my therapist is the best I’ve ever had after 20+ therapists in the past 30 years).

“I have problem X. You’ve seen 1000 people with problem X, what is the solution that works the best.”

And she usually has a great solution. Sometimes she will tell me. But sometimes she will use a trick to get me to figure it out.

Here’s her two “tricks”:

1) KID TRICK: “If your daughter came to you with this problem, what advice would you give her?”

Usually the answer is then obvious.

2) BUSINESS TRICK: “If you had this situation in business (e.g. someone not calling you back on an important deal being equivalent to a woman never calling me back) what would you do?”

Usually the answer is obvious.

How can you apply these two tricks?

A) Find someone you love. Pretend they have the problem. What would you tell them.
B) Find something you are GREAT at. Pretend a version of the problem is happening in that situation. What would you do?

Two important things I always learn from her:

– keep expectations low. Happiness = Reality divided by Expectations. You can’t change reality overnight but you can change expectations in a second.

– don’t make decisions when you are feeling anxiety. Recognize when your thoughts are coming from anxiety. This takes practice.

M) FRIENDS

For many years I played Scrabble at 5 in the morning with my friends Ari and Dina Pace Shackelford when I lived 60 miles north right along the Hudson River.

It was like we all drifted ashore for awhile after being shipwrecked from the horror of our lives.

And we clung to each other over Scrabble first thing in the morning so as not to sink further into our respective depressions.

I don’t have many friends. But the people who have been there at my low points (and when I’ve been there for their low points) are people I can see years later and start right back up.

So Dina meeting me for coffee for first time in three or four years and we will catch up.

N) FOOD

I don’t like to eat a full lunch. I don’t know if this is good or bad. But it makes me feel ill to feel fool in the middle of the day.

And, again, I don’t store food.

So I order from Juice Press two smoothies. They have to have a lot of greens and a lot of proteins. And I order smoothies instead of juices to retain the fiber of the underlying greens.

O) NEW CREATIVITY

I love YouTube now.

Maybe as much as I love writing. Kevin Alloca, one of the heads of YouTube, recently came on my podcast after writing his book on what makes videos viral.

So I’m going to launch two different YouTube channels. One is a post-game analysis of every podcast.

We have an audience now for each podcast. Afterwards, the guest leaves and we analyze what we learned and what I could have done better.

With Jasmine we’re also launching, “Jasmine and James Do Stuff” where we talk or argue about whatever is important to stuff and, sometimes, we do stuff.

I like to “Choose Myself”. And I know from my HBO days that video editing is just as much part of the story as the story itself. So I want to learn to edit.

Every week now, Jay Yow comes over and we edit together what I’m working on and he shows me new things.

Plus I will read ads for my podcast with him. He can edit those!

I’m in the middle of pitching various TV shows. But I hate doing that. I feel like I’m outsourcing all of the power to Hollywood. It’s one giant middleman that’s going to disappear.

I have many reasons for thinking of this.

Suffice to say, a YouTube channel that gets 2mm views a month is doing better than 95% of TV shows and is probably more creative and satisfying.

This assumes no podcast. Some days are podcast days. Or podcast prep days.

I love my podcast. I’ve been doing it over 4.5 years.

But I’m also addicted to new things.

P) PHONE CALLS, EMAILS, BUSINESS and the BUSINESS OF BUSINESS

I save this for later in the afternoon. Creativity has to come first or all is lost.

Some days are worse than others. Some days

I return a dozen calls or more to keep track of the various things I’m involved in. I’ll also usually call one or two friends. And try one of my kids (the hardest of all to get ahold of. It’s like they are deep undercover spies somewhere).

This makes me sound important. It’s actually the reverse. If I were important, I’d return ZERO calls.

Instead, I’m usually scared and desperate for information so I call and call and call to find out as much information as possible and see how I can help with emails, ideas, introductions, etc.

The other day I came up with a great idea for one company I’m involved in. They are building a non-lethal gun. “Wrap Technologies”. It’s the most amazing thing I’ve seen.

If I have any thing called a “legacy” in life (a word I don’t like since I’ll be dead when I have one) I hope it’s being involved in this company that will save millions of lives.

I hope they use my idea.

Q) JASMINE

In October I started seeing someone.

I realized something: Relationships are REALLY hard.

Everyone always told me, “the right relationship will seem easy.”

This is completely false.

I love this person and I’ve never had to work so hard on myself to make sure I communicate my feelings, understand her communications, and every day bring more and more surprise and joy and understanding into the relationship.

We don’t see each other every day. Which is new for me. In almost every prior relationship, the woman moved in almost immediately. Not this time.

But we are seeing each other today.

And I hope we do absolutely nothing.

R) FOOD AND ALCOHOL

I have two things I like to do for dinner.

1) I only order appetizers.

For some reason, I feel restaurants put all the flavor in the appetizers. I always think entrees are too heavy and too bland.

When Jasmine and I ate at Wolfgang Puck’s restaurant (name-dropping again) after my podcast with him, I have to say, the entrees were worth it and he sat down with us for awhile and I felt important and felt like I was impressing Jasmine (I wasn’t).

2) Occasionally…alcohol.

For 6 years I stopped drinking alcohol completely.

But thanks to the podcast guests and their books, I see some of the benefits of occasional alcohol. So sometimes I’ll have a glass or two of wine.

S) STANDUP COMEDY

Three or four times a week I do standup comedy around the city. But I’m not doing it tonight and this is really just about today.

But when I do standup comedy, my evening routine is completely different.

I’m not a night person. But I love doing standup.

Something has to change at some point but I’m not sure what yet.

I’m 50 and I’m always trying to figure things out.

T) MORE JASMINE

I love her

—–

This is today. Tomorrow will be about 50% different.

Interspersed throughout the day I’ll try to do “micro meditating”.

I am an anxious person. Anxiety, for me, comes from feeling like I am not worthy for success.

So when success gets close, I get more and more anxious.

And then I make bad decisions. And then I lose the success.

Micro-meditating (and there are various methods I use for this), helps me keep the anxiety in control and also help recognize when I am about to make decisions because of anxiety.

I also should exercise more. But I try to walk a lot (or run up six flights of stairs whenever I go to my apartment).

Some days I see more friends. But how many close friends can one have? I’m trying more to just be really close with the friends I have an only occasionally make new friends.

On Comedy days I see friends more than on non-Comedy days.

I don’t like to end the day unhappy or anxious. But if I live the day I just outlined, I will fall asleep happy.

U) What will I do in the last half hour of the day?

Because today is a “Jasmine Day” and not a comedy day, I’ll

– talk
– listen
– read
– read to her
– we’ll listen to music
– we’ll …
– we’ll laugh.

(not sure if Jasmine approves me of talking about her this much. But…get used to it).

I’ve mentioned this before, but:

***
the average child laughs 300 times a day. The average adult….five times.

***

Today I wil laugh closer to 300.

And most of that is at night.

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341 – Anders Ericsson [Anniversary Episode]: 7 Secrets of Mastery

 

Anders K. Ericsson discovered the “10,000” hour rule. I had him on my podcast in 2016 to talk about peak performance. (One of my favorite topics.)

He broke down the steps everyone needs to know to learn and MASTER a skill.

I still use what I learned from Anders everyday.

So I’m really proud to re-release this episode. And I also included some brand new, bonus content for you. I just recorded it. It’s a mix of my favorite insights, lessons and quotes from Anders. Listen and enjoy!

Here’s 7 things I learned about how to become a PEAK performer:

A) Train to do things that you can’t do   

Laszlo Polgar raised three prodigies. But the prodigy is a myth.

He had three daughters. The Polgar sisters.

They were world-class chess players. Two became world champions.

But they weren’t born with talent. Talent is a dangerous myth with the power to decrease motivation.

The Polgar sisters trained.

“That’s pretty compelling in retrospect,” Anders says.

Don’t let the myth of talent trap you.

Become compelling instead.

B) There is no can’t

“People have been convinced that as an adult you’re pretty much fixed,” Anders says, “…that there’s a limit on what you can do.”

They’re wrong.

Whenever you start something you start at zero.

Because you can’t do it… yet.

C) Predict today. Just today

I don’t want to know my future. Predictions are dreams that become worries.

How do you change your life? I don’t know. But I’ll tell you what works for me.

Do things you love. Everyday.

Practice. Improve 1% a day.

Practicing something you love takes away the pain.

And time passes.

Your future slips in. And you’re there with new skills. New opportunities. And a new future.

No predictions. Just presence.

D) Follow your motivating source

Writing helps me sort things out. And lets me help people.

Maybe you.

I hope.

That’s my motivating source.

I asked Anders, “How would you guide someone to find their area?”

Look at “the joy you get.”

There’s a fountain inside. You have one. And if you follow it, you’ll always have something that flows.

You can use it to reach new levels, Anders says, “but that is ultimately not the reward itself.”

“For example, if you’re a musician and able to play in front of an audience, and actually feel how that audience is moved by your music, those are your driving forces.”

They’re “key to reaching exceptional levels,” he says.

E) Get a teacher…

F) …the right teacher

All the greats had great teachers.

“You need a specialized teacher with accumulated knowledge,” Anders says.

First you learn the basics. Then practice. Get feedback. And advance.

Socrates, The Polgar Sisters, Michelangelo. They all reached mastery. And made unique contributions.

But you don’t need a teacher to do that. To make a difference.

G) Learn by doing

You can’t really be capable of anything until you do it.

So you have to try.

Anders says, “Willingness to fail is at the heart.”

Find joy in the process.


I was in one of the studies mentioned in Anders’ book. It was on chess masters.

I’m proud of that. But there is one downside to mastery.

You can’t master it all.

 

Links and Resources

Also Mentioned

  • Outliers: The Story of Success by Malcolm Gladwell
  • The Polgar SIsters (the 3 best female Hungarian chess players ever)
  • Laszlo Polgar (chess teacher who raised 3 chess prodigies his daughters)
  • The Inner Game of Tennis: The Classic Guide to the Mental Side of Peak Performance
  • Mozart – considered the most talented prodigy in music history, Anders disputes this
  • Magnus Carlsen – the best chess player in the world at age 12
  • Michelangelo
  • Picasso – one of the best painters of his time
  • Andy Warhol – in the 1950s he was a master illustrator
  • The Boston Marathon

 

Thanks so much for listening! If you like this episode, please subscribe to “The James Altucher Show” and rate and review wherever you get your podcasts:

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