Habits and Hustle - Episode 225: Daniel T. Willingham: Why Learning Is Hard and How To Become Better At It
Episode Date: March 22, 2023Why is learning so hard for some of us? In this episode of Habits and Hustle, I chat with Daniel T. Willingham about the frustrations many of us have with learning both in academic and real-life sett...ings. While it’s important to be a good independent learner in our day-to-day if we want to grow, most of us need support in different ways. Daniel offers tips and strategies for becoming a better learner, how to keep distractions away, and more. To learn more about Daniel: Book: Outsmart Your Brain: Why Learning Is Hard & How You Can Make It Easier Website: http://www.danielwillingham.com/ My links: Website: https://www.jennifercohen.com/ Instagram: @therealjencohen Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Hi guys, it's Tony Robbins. You're listening to Habits in Hustle.
Crescent.
So today we have Daniel Willingham on the podcast who wrote a book called Outsmart Your
Brain, Why Learning It's Hard and How You Can Make It Easy.
You went to Harvard, right?
You've been teaching at the University of Virginia for many years.
Are you still there, by the way?
I am still there.
Oh, you are.
Okay.
Have you been there this whole time?
Yeah.
Wow.
I mean, I came here in 1992. I mean, I went home some, you know, in the evenings.
But yes, I've been working here since 1992.
So do you want to just start? Let's start by just giving people a little bit of background
and who you are and why you wrote this book called Outsmart Your Brain and what makes you the,
you know, the experts. I mean, I know why you are, but just kind of
give us a quick origin story of who you are.
For sure.
My background is in experimental psychology and the work I did in graduate school was
sort of at the intersection of cognitive psychology and neuroscience.
So it's interesting, both mind and brain.
And I studied learning.
My work at that time was very technical. So they're sort of the old
joke that you get a PhD and your parents tell your friends like tell their friends. My son is a doctor
but not the type who helps people. I sort of went one better so I studied learning but I couldn't
like help you learn anything really because the work I was doing was but I couldn't help you learn anything really, because the work
I was doing was, like I said, very technical.
And I did that for about 10 years post PhD.
So I taught for a couple years at William College, William's College, and then I came here
to the University of Virginia.
And then there's an education nonprofit in town.
And the head, I had a reason to meet with the the person who founded it.
And he said, why don't you come into we have this big annual conference with like five or six hundred
teachers. Why don't you come and talk to them about cognitive psychology and how learning works.
And I said, I don't know anything about like how you know education like I'm the type of person
who studies learning who can't help you learn. And he said, no, we get all that. But like, we just think it
would be, I just think the teachers would find it interesting. So, you know, I have an
ego like anybody else. I'm like, sure, I'll come talk to your teachers. And so I showed
up, well, before I showed up, like two weeks before I was supposed to give this talk, like
this is now six months later. And like I'm creeping up in the talk
And I suddenly panic and I realize when am I going to tell teachers about how people learn that they don't already know and so
But you know, it was too late for me to cancel so I literally just sort of picked some slides from the course
I had been teaching to sophomores here at UVA for
Years already by that time.
And it's like the first course you would take in learning about learning in college.
And I showed up at this conference and to my astonishment, the teachers not only didn't
know it, but they thought it was really interesting and applicable to the kinds of things that
they were doing, helping people learn how to learn. And this was like 2001.
And my career completely changed at that point.
I suddenly realized, wow, my field has been doing a terrible job
of telling people about what we know,
about learning and attention,
and all these aspects of our own minds
that we want to be able to better control.
And so I shut down my basic science lab and worked on writing for popular audiences, for
teachers, for students, for parents, for just adults who want to understand learning
more thoroughly and specifically be able to learn more effectively in their own lives.
So that's what I've been doing
for about the past 15 years or so.
And so you had another book before this book
and what was the name of that book?
It was called.
And a few.
There's probably my most popular
is called Why Don Students Like School.
And that's directed to teachers.
I also have a couple of books about reading as well.
So let me ask you, so why is learning so hard?
Like I feel like there are people
who are just naturally more gifted at learning in school
at academics and there are other people
me included in this, who just really had a hard time
in school.
Why is that?
So I think there, those are two slightly different questions,
but and let me start with the more general and one,
of why most people find learning kind of challenging.
And this is really the theme of the book,
which is that we tend to use strategies for learning
that feel like they're working,
which seems perfectly logical,
and then also don't feel too difficult.
But the not feeling too difficult,
this is why the book is called
Outsmart Your Brain. Your brain kind of tricks you into doing strategies that feel effective,
but actually aren't. So the analogy I draw on the book is, suppose you had a friend who
says they're trying to get into shape. One of the things they want to be able to do is they want
to be able to do a lot of push-ups. So you go visit them one day when they're training and you find them and they're doing push-ups on their knees. And you say, why are you doing,
like you want to be able to do a lot of push-ups, you should be practicing regular push-ups. I mean,
in fact, it'd be even better if you like practice the really hard ones, like the ones where you
launch yourself off the floor and clap. And your friends said, you know, a couple people told me that
and I tried that, but like I can barely do any of those, right?
And the point here is I'm trying to do a lot of pushups and look, when I do them on my
knees, I can do so many pushups so fast, right?
And so people recognize that you need to challenge yourself when you're doing physical exercise.
This turns out the same is true when you're trying to learn something.
A lot of people when they're want to learn something. A lot of people want to learn something,
they end up doing the mental equivalent
to push ups on their knees.
So this is why one of the reasons learning is hard.
And I think the analogy works in the sense that also,
that it's not that push ups on your knees
is no exercise at all.
And it's not that the things people do
when they're trying to learn are completely ineffective.
They're just not very efficient.
And so they could make much better use of their time
if they knew some other strategies.
It's amazing that you use that particular analogy.
I don't know if you know my background at all,
but that is my background fitness.
All right.
Yes.
And so whenever I have people on the podcast,
I don't know, most of the time,
they use these fitness
analogies because of my background,
which is really funny, but why I love that analogy
is because there's like two trains of thought
of the push up, right?
You have some people who really believe
that you should be doing it on your knees
to get stronger and as you get stronger,
you go into your toes.
I'm a believer that if you wanna do a push up,
you gotta do a push up on your toes. And you know, even if you want to do a push up, you've got to do a push up on your toes.
And even if you only can do one push up or a half a push up, it's still better than
doing those knee pushups.
Because you're never going to get to the toes if you don't practice on your toes, right?
So I love that you use that.
So can you talk about then using the same type of, you know,
saying with that kind of analogy of challenge yourself
on your toes with your brain?
What would be some ways that we could do those more
challenging learning techniques so we can get better
versus, you know, doing the half-ass way
of being on your knees with the push-ups?
Sure, I mean, there are lots of examples I could give.
I'll start with reading.
So, when people are reading, we read for different purposes, obviously. And the type of reading I'm
talking about now is not like where you're reading for pleasure, you know, you're reading sort of
light non-fiction or, you know, a novel or something like that. But instead, like, there's something
that's probably work-related that's kind of serious, then kind of challenging
and you're reading not for the purpose of being entertained,
but you're reading for the purpose of learning something new.
When you're doing that type of reading,
the thing that people tend to do is they fall back on
the type of reading that is familiar to them.
And the type of reading that's familiar to you
is you kind of plop down a chair
and you just start reading.
Like when I ask my students
like how do you read this? They look at like I've asked a really strange question. They're like,
I don't know like sitting like what do you even mean? Like how do I read it? Like you put your
eyes on it, you just start reading. And coupled with that is people highlight. And highlighting,
highlighting feels like a great idea because it feels really efficient.
You're like, I'm noting now what is important so that later if I need to revisit this, I can
find the important parts really easy and I'll save time.
I won't have to reread the whole thing.
But the truth is when you're reading something that's kind of challenging and new to you,
you don't know what's important.
And so you're not very likely to highlight
what's actually the most important content.
So this was examined in a pretty clever study
by some researchers with college students.
And the researchers went to the used bookstore on campus
and they bought 10 copies of like the PolySci 101 textbook
and the Econ 101 textbook.
They bought 10 copies of each.
And then they just compared, they're used copies,
and they just compared what had the previous owner highlighted.
And what they found was all these students
had highlighted different things, right?
So it just sort of goes to show,
when you're first starting out,
you don't know exactly what you're doing.
So what's a better way to tackle reading
that you're challenging's challenging and familiar.
What you want to do is instead of just sitting down and starting to read with your highlighter
in hand, you actually want to have a little bit of a plan.
So there's studies showing that the way that you read and what you get out of what you
read differs depending on what you perceive to be your goal.
What am I expecting to learn from this? And so you can, and even if you have,
you know, very vague expectations
because like someone told you to read,
your boss told you to read this,
you don't really know what it's gonna be.
If it's semi-technical reading,
there's gonna be headings and subheadings.
So you can look at the headings and subheadings
and from that sort of figure,
what does this seem to be about?
What am I expecting I am going to know by the end of,
having read this?
And that should generate some questions.
And now when you're reading, you're thinking of two things.
One is, did I pose the right questions or not?
And two, if I did pose the right questions,
what are the answers?
And so that's gonna get you thinking much more deeply about what you're reading.
And as you're doing it, instead of highlighting, take notes.
And notes are a better idea than highlighting because you can edit them more easily.
So that if you later, you know, two thirds of the way through, you suddenly realize, oh,
I'm not, I actually didn't really understand what this was about.
Then you can adjust your notes, whereas highlighting, of course, that's not an option.
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Well, I find that what happens a lot of times
with some people, like I was saying earlier,
is again, I'm gonna use myself as an example.
I get distracted really easy.
If I'm not interested in the material,
I'll get very distracted.
I can read the same sentence 77,000 times and not comprehend it.
So I don't know what to write.
I don't know what kind of note to write.
I won't know what to do.
And it becomes very difficult.
What can you, do you have any tips and suggestions for people who get distracted easily when they're
trying to learn material and they're not normally good at reading?
Absolutely.
So distraction, I mean, there are two different types of distraction,
and they call for slightly different strategies. There's distraction from without, that's literally,
like, there's something happening around you, and so you're distracted. We've all heard, like,
you should be in a quiet place with the minimum number of distractions. That's absolutely right.
Sometimes you're not able to do that,
but when you think about it, I don't know about you,
but like, I'm way too optimistic
about where I'm gonna get work done.
And so when I'm more real, you know,
I'm like, oh, I'm waiting for a plane.
Oh, I'll read this article when I'm at the gate.
And then there's like kids screaming
and someone's spilling soda on me and stuff.
You know, it never works out as well as I think I'm going to.
So being a little more realistic about, you know, planning and how easily you
are distracted, I think, and help a little bit.
Rest breaks definitely help lots and lots of empirical research on that.
And that is very much in line with sort of our intuition that you do come back
fresher from a break.
The one thing I'll suggest for your audiences, think about what you're doing during that break.
Like don't do something that actually doesn't make you come back feeling like you've had
a break.
Like some people are like instantly on their phone and they're like, you know, updating
Instagram and doing all this stuff.
And it's actually kind of taxing.
And so when they come back, they don't feel like a little bit rested and a little bit refreshed. They just, you know,
they feel equally, they're perhaps more exhausted. So think about that. The other way that people
get distracted is, of course, social media. And, you know, having trouble thinking about what
you're doing, like if you find that your thoughts are frequently
drifting to social media, I'll throw one idea
out there for your listeners, which is,
think about whether you really want,
whether you really enjoy social media
or whether you just kind of want it.
Now we've all heard that you get this dopamine rush
from social media.
And the common perception is that dopamine
is sort of the reward neurotransmitter.
Dopamine plays a role in reward,
but the role it plays as probably more important
is as a let's do that again, neurotransmitter.
So neurotransmitter that tells you this was a good thing,
you should keep doing this.
And it runs in parallel with other neurotransmitters that are more that feels good, as opposed to
you should do this again in the future.
One of the things that can happen for, and I know this happens for me, is that those two
things are separable.
The feeling of really enjoying something is not identical with, I should keep doing this again.
And so, the keep doing it again
outlives the enjoyment.
And something that initially was very fun
actually becomes not that much fun,
but you keep on feeling the urge to do it.
I have had this conversation a lot with a lot of my students and they'll talk about
feeling addicted to Snapchat and I'll say, oh, you must really love it. They're like, actually,
I hate it. It dominates my life. It's so boring. I feel obligated to get on. It's like, oh my god,
you're so beautiful. I can't believe it. And it's it's just like, it's enane and it's, but they do feel this urge to do it. And part of that is, of course,
social reciprocity. Their friends are doing it. And so they feel like they've got to do it.
But they say it's more than that. If that's all it were, like I would bundle all those things
together and just like get it done at 6 p.m. or something. But instead, I do feel this urge.
So this isn't true for everybody, but like I would interrogate your own motivations a little bit
and think, when I'm distracted by social media,
do I really enjoy it when I'm doing it,
or do I just kind of want it?
That, by the way, that's a wonderful commentary,
because I think that's so on the nose,
because we are so drawn and pulled towards doing it. And I don't think it's because
most of us even actually like it. It's because we feel this like necessity to do it because
what are we missing? Like the fear of missing something, of not knowing. It's like retrained
our brains in a certain way. And so you're saying there's a big difference because I know
for me, for Instagram,
I was like, I don't enjoy it.
It's actually like the opposite of being in,
the opposite.
It's like an obligation.
It's an obligation.
And then like a feeling of like, what am I missing?
What's on there that I don't know?
And it's like, that takes you down a whole other rabbit hole
and I know I'm not alone.
Especially if you're constantly having to feed the beast,
having to constantly pose, having to constantly do that. So I guess the
question I have for you is because there is, you're saying there's a difference
between having that feeling of need because that's how your brain now is,
that's really the neurotransmitter versus the one. How do we really distinguish?
And how do we actually not even distinguish?
Because I think we can distinguish. How do we stop ourselves from being pulled to something that we know
intellectually we don't want to be doing?
Yeah, well I think that I think recognition can for a lot of people that gets them a long
a long way there because they recognize what okay, so let me think now,
why exactly am I doing this?
If it is social obligation and reciprocity,
I've had talks about this actually with my children
as well as some of my students.
Because they feel, yeah, I've got a 16 year old
and a 17 year old, so they're sort of right
in the sweet spot of like, you know,
that social obligation feeling. And we've talked about sort of talking with your friends
about like, I do have Instagram, but here's what I use it for. And so just so you know,
like, love you to death, but I'm not going to be on there every day commenting about how
pretty you are or whatever it is. Like, I'm gonna be on periodically
and that, you know, here's what I'm using it for.
And, you know, obviously, if like these are your friends,
they're gonna be fine with that.
So, yeah, I mean, I think that more broadly,
taking it away from just my kids, you know,
more broadly, you can think about,
what is it that is prompting me to feel like
I still need to be doing this
and is there another way that I can meet that need?
So for example, I would imagine that you got professional obligations is not just personal
social obligations.
And so, you know, that's a different thing.
Then you do need to be getting on because it's such an important channel.
But you can think of, that's probably feels a little bit less
urgent that there's the constant fear of missing out and you can more readily bundle that
and schedule it.
Hmm. Okay. I like that. So you talk about in your book about being an independent learner.
What is an, how do we become an independent learner? What is it in your definition?
Yeah. My definition is where you are responsible for your own learning.
And so the easy way to think about that is contrasting it with someone who's not an independent learner.
Small children are not at all independent learners.
Our expectations of children are appropriately zero.
Right? And I joke in the book, know, preschooler ever came home and their parent
chided them like, you know, your teacher tells me you're not really trying to learn your
colors, right? It's like, we understand it's completely, it's completely up to the teacher
to create an environment where the child is going to learn. And then slowly as school,
as the child moves through the grades, they become more and more responsible for their
own learning. And, you know, by the time they come to me and college,
most of the learning they do is really,
they're doing it on their own.
Our expectation is for every hour that you're in classes,
you're probably spending three hours or more
learning outside of the classroom.
And so that's all up to you
to regulate how that learning happens. So what do you think, by the way, of the idea that because
we all learn differently, do you think it's going to shift and change how people in
school are going to learn? Because right now it's pretty much no matter where you are.
It's about going to lectures or taking notes. And I feel like we're people, it's
really in like the zikis right now,
people talking about all sorts of different,
not everyone can learn like that anyway,
like we're talking about.
Do you think that we're gonna start learning differently,
have different modalities to learning,
or that's kind of not gonna happen?
So there are two pieces to that question.
One is the question about how differently do we really all learn? And the answer
is there are lots of ways in which the way that we learn is actually highly similar. And in a way,
that's not that surprising. I mean, everyone's got a circulatory system that kind of works roughly
the same way, the gist of system that works roughly the same way and so on. And so you've got a
central nervous system. And the basic architecture of how your brain works,
like it can't be that different across people,
like evolution has not created
several different categories of brains,
like there's a human brain.
And the basics of how it operates
are probably highly similar across individuals.
What's different is what individuals have learned in the past,
what they already, what they come into a new learning task
already knowing, which is enormously important
for what your experience is going to be in that learning task.
If you already know a lot of similar stuff,
then this new learning task is going to be very different
than if you're coming to it brand new.
And of course, we have different motivations, we have different goals going into a learning task is gonna be very different than if you're coming to it brand new. And of course, we have different motivations,
we have different goals going into a learning task,
we have different senses of ourselves as learners.
If you see yourself as decidedly not a math person,
but then you're starting a new business
and someone tells you like, well, you're on your own,
like you're gonna have to figure out the accounting. You're, you know, you're of course gonna be like, oh my well, you're on your own. Like, you're gonna have to figure out the accounting.
You're, you know, you're, of course, gonna be like,
oh my God, I've got deep trouble.
I've never been good at this.
And the way you react during, you know,
suppose you take an online accounting course.
Well, one of the things about learning is
there are always setbacks.
You know, you fail a quiz or you like,
there's something you just really can't wrap your mind around.
But your interpretation of those setbacks is so different
depending on your self-image as a learner.
So if you're good at math and you're taking the accounting course,
you go into it thinking this is not going to be hard for me
because I'm always good at this stuff.
And when there's a setback, you're like,
oh, they explain that stupid
because I didn't understand it.
Must be their explanation.
Whereas if it were me, who's never always struggled a little bit, I'd be like, I knew it.
You know, I knew this was going to be the hardest part of starting this business because
I just have always sucked in that.
So those are ways in which people really do differ, but it's less about like, oh, your
brain is really different than mine.
It's more like your experiences have been different than mine. It's more like your experiences have been different than mine.
And that's led to different things that you know
and can do.
And part of that includes sort of your perception of yourself.
So that's the first part.
Then the second part is because of, you know,
chat, GPT, God help us and Zoom
and all these other things,
is school radically gonna change school radically going to change.
It's very hard to know.
I mean, I can tell you, I've been in education now for 15, 20 years.
And, you know, for a while, it was Chromebooks are going to change everything.
Schools are going to look unguessibly different.
Then it was Oculus.
Oculus is going to change everything.
There's always some new tech thing that everyone's saying
is going to change everything. There are two reasons
that none of them have panned out yet. One is that you just
get unanticipated complications that make it harder to
implement in classrooms than you thought it was going to be.
The second thing is that education is a conservative enterprise.
It's conservative partly because teachers
are used to doing what they've all was done.
And they feel like, I've got a good thing going here.
Like you had better be pretty charming.
If you think I am going to completely change
what I've been doing for the last 20 years,
because you've got a VR set, like I need more than that.
And the other things that parents are really conservative,
parents want school for their children
to look like they remember school being,
because most of them look back, not all,
but most of them look back and feel pretty positively
about the experience they had.
So that's why not much has happened yet
and why I suspect not much is going to happen in the future.
That's interesting to me because I think I get what you're saying, but a Chromebook and the Oculus, but the
ChapGP, that to me is a little different only and I hear it you're saying because I've heard those comp what you've
said before about like there's, there's going to be all sorts of kinks in the system that will make it very very difficult that we haven't even thought of. But, you know, like the chat GPT thing, like I can say, hey, do an essay or a two,
I mean, 500 words thing on World War One or on this. And it will literally give it to me, right?
Like within like two, and if I don't like it, I can tweak it and modify it.
So, how does that, because we've never had that before.
Doesn't that change the game, though?
Because kids can now don't, they don't have to rely
on their brain at all to think about the stuff
and the steps.
They can just type it into an AI thing,
and it just pops out for them.
We never had that, even with Crow.
That's never been an option.
So there are two answers.
One is I haven't verified this yet.
So I don't know if this is right,
but somebody on a Facebook group
that I was looking at just said,
like you can put an essay into chat GPT and say,
did you write this?
And you'll actually get an accurate answer.
I don't know if that's true or not.
That would be great if it were true.
If that GPT could just tell you, yes, that was me.
But even if it can't, so let me tell you what,
think about math teachers.
So math teachers in the last month have frequently been saying,
oh, so you say that children now have access
to a technology at home that allows them
to solve problems that you set.
My, my, my, that must be really distressing for you,
right? Because, of course, it's not just calculators, but, you know, kids have been Googling
math problems for years now and finding answers online. And so math teachers have, of course,
met this challenge and thought about ways of getting around this to make sure that children
are actually learning math and they're not just Googling. So I imagine the same kind of thing is going to happen.
That makes that's actually a good point. I didn't know that so that you can just put if they give
you an essay, you can just check everybody by saying, did you write this chapter G.P.T. and I'll say
yeah, I did. I have not verified that so I don't know if that's accurate or not. That would be so
helpful though, right? Because that would change the game 100%.
Because I had a book that came out a couple of months ago
and I gave it to somebody.
They wanted to read my book.
And I'm like, I'm going to quiz you on it as a joke, right?
And so I'm like, what was my book about?
And they sent me like five really strong paragraphs
on what my book, and they nailed it, right?
I'm like, wow, this person really did what my book and it was they nailed it right I'm like wow this person really did right you know read my book but but there were a couple
things in there that I knew that was impossible so I mean like there are like
there are kings in there and I think like to your point they'll probably figure
out ways around it navigate it so people can't cheat like they can because if I
could pick it up you know that someone's doing that.
At this stage, it's very new still, but...
Maybe we just tell students, chat GPT, I just put your essay into chat GPT and ask chat
GPT.
Even if chat GP can't do it, can't we just tell students that...
I think we can.
I think that's enough of a scare, right, TAC.
TAC, I think that scare tactics work all the time.
Life is full of what ifs.
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that's talkify.com slash habits. So I guess a big question I have for you, I guess like a great segue, is like procrastination,
right?
Because when we don't want to do something, we procrastinate.
Do you have any tips on this?
How do we stop procrastinating?
I think the usual tips that you hear are, can be pretty good.
I mean, so psychologists who look at procrastination
agree that like you're, and this is a case where you're
intuition about what's going on is pretty accurate.
It's you're making a decision.
And the decision, the choice is between something that seems
pretty like it's going to be pretty unpleasant to do
versus something that is more pleasant.
There is one twist to this that a lot of people don't appreciate. This is a
phenomenon called time discounting. And this is the idea that when you're contemplating
getting a reward, if you're contemplating getting the reward in the future, it has less
rewarding oomph to it than it does if you're going to get it immediately.
So the example I like to use is suppose your doctor has told you you really need to be
cut that back on your sugar like your blood sugar is not great.
So you're like, okay, I'm really going to try and do that.
And you're in the grocery store and you've got your buggy and you go by the ice cream
aisle and you see your favorite type of ice cream and you think, man, that would be really
nice after supper tonight to have that ice cream.
Okay, so now you've got a choice.
Listen to my doctor and don't buy the ice cream
or buy the ice cream and have it after supper.
Now, compare that choice to this one.
You're at home, you've just finished supper.
Your significant other says, oh, this is so thoughtless of me.
I got myself a bowl of ice cream.
I didn't even ask you if you wanted one here.
Do you want this one?
Now, you've got the same choice in front of you.
Ice cream versus listen to my doctor.
But our intuition is pretty obvious.
It's a whole lot harder to turn down the ice cream
when you're contemplating getting it seconds from now
compared to resisting the ice cream
that you're thinking about getting eight hours from now.
That's time discounting.
When we think about procrastination, when my choice is, I've got this thing I'm supposed
to do for work, I really don't feel like doing it, but the new Ted Lasso season just started.
Should I watch Ted Lasso or not?
Now you see that delaying Ted Lasso.
Now the thing you would say,
which is true enough, it's like,
Dan, do your work, you can watch Ted Lasso
when you're done, like an hour and a half from now.
But Ted Lasso, an hour and a half from now
is not the same as Ted Lasso immediately,
has less rewarding oomph to it.
So a lot of the strategies in dealing with procrastination
are supposed to make the negative thing
seem less negative.
So one way it seems negative is that it can seem overwhelming.
This is a common reason people procrastinate.
I won't make any headway anyway, right?
And so the common advice is break it down into more
digestible chunks.
I think that's very good advice. Another thing you can do that you hear
less often is to try and reframe your choice. So instead of thinking, do I want to do this
work now or do I want to watch Ted Lasso? You could think, well, do I want to watch Ted
Lasso now and probably not enjoy it as much because I know I've got this thing hanging over my head,
or do I want to knock this thing off so that I can forget about it, and then I'm free and I can
do whatever I want. So that doesn't work for everybody in every situation, but you can try it
sometimes and see if that reframing, you know, sort of emphasizing that, now you're choosing not
to have the task be done. you're denying yourself the pleasurable feeling
of having finished that task.
See if that makes a difference for you.
I like that.
I mean, the reframing is a good one.
Tell me another.
Yeah, I think, I mean, for all of these things,
and throughout the book, I do this,
like for every problem that you face,
I think it's good to have like four or five different strategies.
You're not gonna use all of them, but obviously, but the idea is like some of them work
for you for some tasks and not other tasks. Or like there's one that really speaks to
you or whatever it is, right? So it's good to have a lot. Another very common one. And
you hear this a lot in fitness actually. It's been studying in fitness is just start.
And it won't be as bad as you think it's going to be. So the original studies on this were actually in fitness when they talked with people about
why they didn't exercise.
People like, oh, go, you're sweaty and you're sore and you're out of breath and it feels
terrible.
And so what they have them do, researchers, how people do is rate one to ten, like how
pleasant or unpleasant you anticipate.
Here, you're
going to do this.
You're going to be on the treadmill for 10 minutes at this speed.
How do you think you'll feel at the end of the 10 minutes?
And people made a prediction.
And then they had them do it.
And they actually rated.
And very consistently, people were like, I don't feel great, but I don't feel as bad
as I thought I was going to feel.
So that's common advice for procrastination also.
It's like, I really don't want to do it.
And once you start, you're like, this really wasn't as bad
as I thought it was going to be.
One other thing I'll invite your listeners to think about
that, again, this is not true for everybody.
But if it's true of you, it's probably true of you
in a lot of circumstances.
Sometimes people procrastinate is a way
of self-handicapping.
So, you know, imagine one of my students, for example, you know, they'll do laundry. There's, you know,
the phenomena of productive procrastination is very familiar to all of us, right? It's like, well,
I don't have to do the terrible work I don't want to do, but I can still feel good about myself,
because I'm making cookies, and I'm doing laundry, right? Suddenly Suddenly my bathroom is like, it's intolerable how dirty my bathroom is.
Let's clean that.
So one of the, and one of the added features of this
is that you're doing productive procrastination
is a way of self-handicapping.
So that you're worried, you know what?
I think even if I work really, really hard
and try and, you know, study for this test,
I'm not gonna do very well anyway.
And that's kind of threatening to me.
I would feel stupid if I studied really hard
and still got a bad grade.
So instead, all of this is sort of unconscious,
or barely conscious.
So instead, what I'm going to do is I'm going to make it
so I really can't study.
And I'm really rushed at the end.
And then if I get a bad grade, well, then it's quite understandable so I really can't study. And I'm really rushed at the end. And then, like, if I get a bad grade,
well, then it's quite understandable because I was just so busy.
I didn't really have time to study.
So if that rings true to you, I mean, then that's
sort of another conversation.
If you're doing that, sort of self-handicaping.
How do you stop doing it?
If you're someone who does that?
I think you need to, you know, it depends on what the task is,
but I think a lot of it is sort of
sitting with the fact that sometimes we work
really hard on things and they don't work out.
And, you know, and that's okay, like, you know,
and especially if it's, you know,
you're nervous about it because like,
you know, you're nervous about doing your taxes
and you're procrastinating like crazy.
And you look back and it's because,
well, my taxes are always a nightmare and I've made
mistakes and the IRS has like corrected me and come after me.
Then I would say, yeah, of course you're nervous about it.
Like this is consistently a horrible experience for you, but like don't discount the possibility
that especially with like taking a little more seriously, maybe getting some help with
it. Like it probably won't be really easy
the first time you do it,
but like you're gonna improve.
If you stick with it and get some resources
to help you through it, you are gonna improve.
And so there's, you know,
but like the path you're on now
is not a path of improvement.
Yeah.
It's a path of despair.
So like, it's a tough loss. That's true path of despair. It's like the top loss.
That's true.
That's true.
What about, you know, because like you were saying, like sometimes when we don't think
we're going to do well anyway, we tend to like subconsciously self-sabotage that possibility
of like that.
So we end up like not doing it because we don't think we're going to do well anyway.
How do we build more self-confidence with learning, right? Because some of us just think we're
stupid and therefore we just are like, I'm stupid in school, I can't do it or I'm
stupid as a learner, I'm not going to do it. Yeah, I mean, I think I think it's
important to recognize that I mean there are there are a few pieces that go into
your self-image as a learner and people tend to focus on just one of those,
which is the feedback that they've gotten in the past.
In the form of grades, maybe in the form of something
a teacher has said to you,
I've made a habit of asking people about,
like, did you have a favorite teacher when you're growing up?
And I've heard a lot of stories
that people have told about teachers.
And I think it's surprising, but in a way, maybe not surprising, how many people have a
story about one offhand remark that they heard from a teacher that really stuck with
them and sometimes more than one.
And sometimes it's positive, sometimes it's really negative.
And you know, you can just tell, like they know the exact phrasing, right?
It's like a flash bulb memory that has stuck with them.
And it's so unfortunate because it was almost from the phrasing
you can tell, like this was not intended to be like,
let me tell you what I think of you.
It was just something that you know, it was offhanded.
It was offhanded, exactly.
Yeah.
And it's true, by the way, that's so true.
Because I have one comment that a teacher said to me
that stuck with me forever.
I write about that also.
I tell people about that one stupid comment,
like what, 35 years, 30 years later, you know what I mean?
It's crazy.
Do you want to tell us now?
Yeah, I mean, I would say that she said to me
as my resource teacher.
She's like, you know, Jennifer's just not a good student,
don't expect much from her.
She's not gonna go to college,
she's not that type of student.
She said it to my mom.
And I remember like, I think that like,
I don't remember if I overheard her say that
or my mom told me at that part,
I think I like kind of don't remember.
But I kind of feel like it propelled me, right?
Because it kind of like, I'll show her type of attitude,
where I like surpassed everything that she could have imagined, right?
But sometimes you need, I use that fuel as fire, I suppose.
But, or I use that as a fuel to go through.
But, which is funny, I didn't realize that that happens
to a lot of other kids, that it happens a lot of times.
It happens, like, well, you well, if you think about it,
start asking people about comments that they remember,
that a teacher made,
because when I've done that,
I almost always find something.
And I'll also mention,
I think it's amazing and so great
that was your response was like,
okay, yeah, let's talk about that, right?
Because I think most people,
they're not able to sort of find that in her strength
and do that.
Most people say like, oh gosh,
like maybe that is really who I am.
But we started off, sorry, sorry, go ahead.
No, I don't know.
I was just finished by saying at the beginning,
I was like, well, that's because of what she said,
it made me think I was really bad in school.
So therefore, I had very,
but a lot of insecurity around learning in school.
Not, and so, but I was fortunate enough
that I had, I built out other strengths outside of school,
like my other type of, you know, smarts.
So it was okay.
And that's how I got the confidence.
But yes, to your point,
I can, that's the thank you. Thank you. Yeah. So, but I wanted to add like that, this is just one
source of our self-image as a learner. It's the one that we're by far the most aware of,
is the feedback we've gotten, but other things really contribute to your self-image as a learner, and it's worth sort of becoming more
aware of that, and considering it, it's like seeing how you feel about it, and whether you want to
sort of reconsider some of it. So one other source of our self-as-alurner is family values.
How your family thought about learning new things, how your family thought about schooling.
This is a, to an extent we don't appreciate,
we absorb these sort of attitudes from,
mostly from our parents.
I mean, you certainly become aware of the fact
that different families have different values,
usually around five or six when you start
visiting friends' homes and you realize,
like, oh oh the rules are
different like they really care about being polite at that house that's weird right but it's like
those kids right I mean everyone's had that experience for like why you know why is Robert's mother
such a freak about finishing your plate like that's not important at my house at all she acts like
that's in the Bible or something right so this is how parents communicate to their kids,
things that are important to them.
And we get, we absorb messages about learning
and about whether learning and schooling grades
are all the same thing,
or whether there's different types of learning,
there's learning that happens outside of school
that's important too,
and that some people are not don't succeed very much in school
but they're really good at other types of learning outside. Right, these are all
beliefs that you absorb early on from your family. Another thing that
contributes to sense of self as a learner is who you compare yourself to. So I
tell the story about one of our graduate students who was legitimately
worried he was going to fail out of the program because he was because of statistics and he thought
I'm just not hacking statistics at all. It turned out he was one of the best in the class but his
husband was in the data science program. So his husband was like, you know, in the 99th percentile or something, and he was in like, you know, the 75th. He was very good, but he was comparing himself
to the wrong person. So that's something you want to, you also want to think about.
And then the last thing that contributes to your sense of self as a learner is who you're
hanging out with. And that may be different than who you compare yourself to.
So if you are around people who make it easy to be a learner
and make it easy to be self-confident as a learner,
that's very different than if you're not.
Like if you're around people who are take learning seriously,
then when you wanna do something
that where you're taking learning seriously, they make that easy to do.
They understand that they get it.
And it doesn't mean like if you've got friends who are not interested in learning, don't see themselves.
It doesn't mean they're bad friends. It's just, and they may be supportive.
But as we all know, it's like, it's a little different when you know they get it.
Like, you know, you're feeling uncomfortable about something and your friends are encouraging you. But if they
don't know anything about it at all, it's like they're being sweet, but like, you
know, I can't help but discount it a little bit, right? Because they don't really
know what I'm going through. And so who your peer group is, who you surround
yourself with, that can also have a real impact on your sense of self as a learner.
That's great. I mean, that's true actually. I agree. But how do we overcome then the anxiety
that we have? When we think we're not good at it, when we don't feel good at it, for all the things
we've talked about, how could we overcome taking, like, having that anxiety when we have to take
a test or we have to learn something? You have like all these like self-comming techniques
that you mentioned.
Can we talk about some of them?
Sure, yeah, and I mean, this is I think, again,
there's sort of two parts to what you said.
One is sort of the anxiety of starting,
like you just feel like I've never been good at this.
Like am I really gonna be able to tackle this new skill
or whatever it is? And there I think think, a big part of it is getting outside of that comparison and
getting outside of that feeling you had in school when the comparisons were so explicit and
so obvious. And you knew you were not very good at this, right? I mean, people who are not
good at reading, it's like, yes, I know, This is the blue bird group, not the slow kids group.
But who's getting through like, we're already a different book than the red birds, right?
You know, exactly, exactly.
You know, kids know at a very early age, but, you know, you're, you're not in school anymore.
And you just need to sit with and be okay with.
Maybe I'm not very good at this, but that's all I don't need to be amazing at it.
That's not my goal.
My goal is to be okay at it.
But how about for kids?
Let's talk about kids, because we all have a lot of people who are listening.
I imagine we'll have kids.
We'll have kids who are parents.
And may have kids who have anxiety around this stuff
and therefore perpetuate to all of it,
they get worse marks, worse grades,
and it becomes like a vicious cycle.
What would you tell parents to help them
with their, help them with their kids?
I would try and think first about
where this anxiety is coming from.
If it's coming from the school and attitudes
that are coming from teachers, then you need
to have a conversation with the teachers. Essentially a value that you don't really share that
is your child's being exposed to, then yeah, you need to have a conversation with them.
I would also wonder whether it's coming from you. And I would sort of interrogate yourself a little bit,
is this really what I want?
Like if your attitude is like,
well, that's just what school is.
And yeah, you're stressed or whatever.
A lot of times parents will feel that way
because that was their experience.
And I would think carefully about whether your child
is experiencing it the same way you did.
Kids do respond to their more reactive
or less reactive to anxiety.
And so it could be that what was just fine for you,
legitimately just fine for you if unpleasant,
is more than unpleasant for your child
and they're really struggling for that reason. So that's the first
thing I would think about. If they're having clinical levels of anxiety, then you need to see
a professional, clinical defined as interfering, like your anxiety is bad enough that it interferes
with things that you want to do in your life and you just can't get them done. Now, for everyday
test anxiety, yeah, there are lots of things that kids can do.
And this is the kind of thing that usually doesn't come online until like middle school
at the earliest.
I mean, if kids are getting anxious about tests in elementary school, that's really,
I almost said a bad word, messed up.
You know, kids in elementary school should not be feeling test anxiety.
And again, I would want to talk with
what's happening in the school
if that's the way they're feeling.
That's interesting.
That's interesting.
My kid gets 100 on every test.
And like, I mean, it doesn't even,
I can't even understand how.
I never got 100 on any test.
So when he gets like 97, he freak,
I'm like, and he's in grade four.
I'm like, can you calm down?
Like, it's in self-induced, because I'm not giving,
I'm like, I'm talking about the effort,
not the other stuff, but you know, like,
I think that sometimes it can just be the pressure,
like you said, maybe around the school.
That's actually a good point for parents.
Yeah, I would definitely have a conversation
if my fourth grader were feeling that kind of pressure,
I would say,
I don't know where this is.
So I think he's very competitive, maybe that's why, but anyway.
Okay, sorry.
Yeah, I'd be thinking about channeling that elsewhere.
100%.
Like, this is not a podcast about my kid either, but I was just saying, like, he's very
competitive, like in everything sports, whatever, but like But I wasn't even bringing this up because of him,
but I think that when I speak to a lot of different parents
and given my audience, I would think that this would be
something that people would be dealing with.
So for their kids or for themselves,
that there's any type of tips about self-comming techniques
would be great.
Sure.
Yeah, so self-comming, the kinds of things you've heard for self-comming, can be really effective.
So before even during a test, prayer, meditation, simple breathing exercises, all of those are
a good idea.
Self-talk is a good idea also.
So when you have, if you have spiraling thoughts during an exam, like, you know, you have a couple of problems
in a row that you're not sure about.
And then that leads to, oh my God, I'm going to fail this exam.
Oh my God, if I fail the exam, I'll probably fail the course.
Oh my God, I'll never get into college.
My mother will be so disappointed and angry.
So spiraling thoughts like that, that after the fact,
you know, don't make any sense.
One thing that can help is the sort of self-talk can be really effective.
So focusing on, first of all, how likely is this to happen?
So, you know, if you'd missed two, are you really likely to fail the exam or do you always
think you're going to fail the exam and then actually things turn out fine?
And then also sort of thinking through the consequences, okay, the worst happens, you're
right.
You know what, you fail the exam.
Now what happens?
Like, is your, are you really on this life course that can't be changed?
There's no bouncing back from this spelling quiz on your fourth grade.
I mean, you're not your son.
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, not your son. No, no, no, but it's so true.
That's what I say.
I'd like calm down.
Like, he's like, mom, I got 14 out of 15.
I'm like, amazing.
He's like, so proud of you.
Yeah.
And he's like, what do you mean?
I miss one.
I'm like, oh my god.
You know, he's like, I'm not going to get into a good middle
school.
That's what he says to me.
Oh, Lord, you know what?
That's going to be fine.
Maybe the worst happens. And you don't get into a good middle school. That's going to be fine. Maybe the worst happens, and you don't get into a good middle
school.
That's going to be fine.
Let me finish this thought, because there's a little bit more
to the self-calling talk.
Yes, please.
When you're trying to be rational, you're like,
you can't do this during an exam.
Because you're too anxious, you're too frazzled,
and you're feeling the time pressure.
So what you want to do is do it a couple of days
before the exam or whatever it is,
this making you anxious,
because even though you can't think
when your anxious memory works pretty well
when you're anxious.
So in the middle of that anxiety attack, you can say,
you know what, I went through all this a couple of days ago
and I remember concluding
this line of thinking doesn't make any sense.
And if you really believed it a couple of days ago, then that memory may very well help.
And you'll say, like, yeah, this is not a good mental path.
I like that one.
I never heard that before.
How memory can help that.
Yeah.
So that's great.
Well, I really liked your book so I thank you for
being on this podcast. It was really really what I loved about it actually is
that it actually had a lot of very useful practical things people could do and
you can put it down, you can you can you can you can you know stop reading it, you
can you can start reading it again for another part. I love that type of book, right?
So you don't feel this like obligation, right?
That it has to be all right in one time.
I try very hard to make it so the chapters are independent.
You can just work on whatever it is you think you want most to work on.
And that makes it so much easier so you don't procrastinate or you don't think,
I'll read this book some other time, like if you have, like it's...
And I also like books that are actually very helpful that are actionable, right?
So that's why I really wanted to have you on this podcast and I really appreciate you
being on.
And where else do people find you, Daniel?
Find your book.
So there's my book.
So I am on my, my website's a disaster.
I do have DanielWilliamHamp.com.
I haven't updated it in forever because like I suck.
On social media, I'm actually on TikTok. I'm a Daniel underscore willing ham on TikTok.
And on Facebook and Twitter, I'm DT willing ham.
Well, and then they can find the book anywhere, right? Like they could buy it on Amazon or wherever.
Yeah, the book anywhere, right? Like they could buy it on Amazon or wherever. Yeah, the book is sold.
Yeah, exactly.
Wherever, find another book's our sold.
You will find my book.
Exactly.
The book is called, Smart Your Brain.
It's a really good read.
And I really suggest you guys grabbing a copy.
So thank you.
Thank you for being on the podcast.
Thank you so much.
It was fun.
That was great.
Thank you.
Hope you enjoyed this episode.
I'm Heather Monahan, host of Creating Confidence,
a part of the YAP Media Network, the number one business
and self-improvement podcast network.
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