Mark Bell's Power Project - EP. 589 - think LESS, How To Accomplish More In Life
Episode Date: September 11, 2021By time you take a second to think, it's already too late. You will over think and talk yourself out of doing it. Think Less. Buy the new think LESS Power Project Shirt here: https://markbellslingshot....com/collections/apparel-accessories/products/think-less-tee Special perks for our listeners below! ➢Magic Spoon Cereal: https://www.magicspoon.com/powerproject to automatically save $5 off a variety pack! ➢8 Sleep: Visit https://www.eightsleep.com/powerproject to automatically save $150 off the Pod Pro! ➢Marek Health: https://marekhealth.com Use code POWERPROJECT15 for 15% off ALL LABS! Also check out the Power Project Panel: https://marekhealth.com/powerproject Use code POWERPROJECT for $101 off! ➢LMNT Electrolytes: http://drinklmnt.com/powerproject ➢Piedmontese Beef: https://www.piedmontese.com/ Use Code "POWERPROJECT" at checkout for 25% off your order plus FREE 2-Day Shipping on orders of $150 Subscribe to the Podcast on on Platforms! ➢ https://lnk.to/PowerProjectPodcast Subscribe to the Power Project Newsletter! ➢ https://bit.ly/2JvmXMb Follow Mark Bell's Power Project Podcast ➢ Insta: https://www.instagram.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ https://www.facebook.com/markbellspowerproject ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mbpowerproject ➢ LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/powerproject/ ➢ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/markbellspowerproject ➢TikTok: http://bit.ly/pptiktok FOLLOW Mark Bell ➢ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/marksmellybell ➢ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/MarkBellSuperTraining ➢ Twitter: https://twitter.com/marksmellybell ➢ Snapchat: marksmellybell ➢Mark Bell's Daily Workouts, Nutrition and More: https://www.markbell.com/ Follow Nsima Inyang ➢ https://www.breakthebar.com/learn-more ➢YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NsimaInyang ➢Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/nsimainyang/?hl=en ➢TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nsimayinyang?lang=en Follow Andrew Zaragoza on all platforms ➢ https://direct.me/iamandrewz #PowerProject #Podcast #MarkBell
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It almost says think ass.
Because you disappeared.
Think ass.
Think ass.
Think ass.
Ass, ass, ass, ass, ass.
Maybe that's what the shirt should have been.
That's a great song.
Paul McCartney.
Unhammered time.
Imagine telling people, like, I'm going to make a song that's just going to go ass, ass, ass, ass.
People around you are like, don't do that.
No, but then having to explain, I'm going to make that song and it's going to be
a huge hit.
People are actually going to like it.
Do you remember?
Booty, booty, booty, booty rocking everywhere.
Who's that?
I found you, Miss New Booty.
Get it together and bring it back to me.
I love that shit.
Music is wild, man. Those motherfuckers can do whatever they want. Really? They really shit. Fucking. Music is wild, man.
Those motherfuckers can do whatever they want.
Really?
They really can.
Man.
How do they do it?
Who knows, man. I'll never be that cool.
Friggin' and first friggin' in the first song on Kanye West's new album, Donda.
It's called Donda Chant.
And the woman is literally saying Donda, Donda, Donda.
Just over and over again.
But it's probably dope.
I skip it.
You had told, because I was like, you asked me, did you listen to that album?
I'm like, no, I need old school Kanye.
And you're like, there is.
And so I checked it out and you lied to me.
There is.
There's not.
Do people really, do people still buy music?
No.
No.
That's why it's all garbage.
Unless you buy like records.
How are so many of these people so rich?
Streaming.
Streaming makes hella money.
Like, especially like, um,
But like with the album you're talking about, did you purchase it?
No, I listened to it on Spotify.
Spotify, yeah.
So Spotify must pay some sort of premium to have
kanye west right i think they get anybody know how any of this works they get i believe that
for every time it's played they get like a percentage of a penny every time it's played
drake's getting billions of listens kanye's been so yeah but yeah they're not making a ton off of
that they're maybe making a ton off of that.
They're maybe making enough to rent the places that they're taking pictures in front of.
And the cars, same thing.
No, they got, nah.
These guys got crazy money.
And then there's people that you never even heard about before
where they show like on MTV Cribs or whatever.
And you're like, what the fuck is this?
That's how old we are.
I don't think MTV is even around.
It doesn't exist anymore, I don't think. No, it's still doesn't exist anymore i don't think no it's still around yeah no i don't think
soundcloud rappers make a lot of money no but soundcloud that that stuff's cool because it
gives these rappers the ability to to get out there with the label yeah that's what chance
the rapper did and right and like all these yeah a bunch of these soundcloud rappers are like just
like they don't they can just put their stuff stuff out on Spotify and just start killing it.
Seems like a rough business to try to be in the music industry at all.
It does.
You know what I was thinking about the other day?
And this was probably old news to people.
Some people are probably like, duh, dude.
But I'm assuming rap beef is fake.
I think it's like wrestling.
Because people are talking about, like, people talking about, like, right now with Kanye and Drake, because apparently they're beefing and they don't want to do something together well that gets kanye
in the news and he has a new album out that gets drake in the news and he has a new album out
and at some point they're going to collab and just make hundreds of millions of dollars on something
yeah but they plan this shit they're like dude let's do a beef like of course yeah let's do it
yeah they're both like facetiming each other laughing laughing their asses off laughing to the bank yeah i think the biggie and tupac was real though yeah
they're not alive the jay-z and naz stuff was real yeah but now like nowadays like i think
i think beef is part of rap not even i think it has to be part of rap marketing like producers
are like okay what kind of beef you think oh you yay do that
beef a push of tea or or drake i think it was drake and drake it's like drake do that beef
push a tea and then release this yeah i don't know about that one because i can't imagine drake had
anything to gain from that it would have been all push a tea and push a tea is being such
a fucking actual lyricist i don't i can't imagine drake would actually accept
bruh these people are still
making millions of dollars with it like i mean this is the thing when there is all this money
involved how much of it can be real like this is i feel like a lot of this is like wrestling
yeah i wonder like shouldn't they just not care
what do you mean like like hey kanye did you hear what so-and-so said about you oh
yeah whatever sounds good like instead of making a whole rap song about i don't know Like, hey, Kanye, did you hear what so-and-so said about you? Oh, got it. Yeah, whatever. Sounds good.
Like, instead of making a whole rap song about it, I don't know.
Yeah.
But maybe that's part of what makes them great.
Having, like, a vindictive side or wanting to get revenge.
And maybe that kind of shines through in their music.
We probably just shouldn't think too much about it.
We should just go with the flow.
Yeah.
We don't know what's going on.
Think less, maybe? Maybe. We should. You know what I'm Yeah. We don't know what's going on. That's the truth. Less?
Maybe?
Maybe.
We should.
You know what I'm thinking about right now is some food.
I'm still fasted, but I'm hungry too.
We were just talking about Cinnabons earlier, and I can't wait to eat tonight. You mentioned Monster Mash, and for some reason, like on the last episode, I think you mentioned it, or maybe it was even yesterday, maybe.
But I'm still thinking about it whenever you said it.
And I'm just like, man, I'm going to grab some Piedmontese and some rice and some bone broth and mix that shit up when I get home.
Because it mixes well.
It's amazing.
Plus the meat like – okay.
So Piedmontese, all their meat is good.
But even their ground beef because usually ground beef is boring.
Their ground beef tastes good.
It tastes – their ground beef is awesome. Their hamburger patties and stuff are just completely off the charts the
sliders the uh what are the fattier ones uh what are those called the hot dotty patties those are
ridiculous um and even the 96 uh four whatever. That's shit is fucking amazing too. And normally that kind of
meat is not good. Normally it's super dry. Yeah. Now the 96, four beef is my favorite.
I love that stuff. It tastes amazing. Um, uh, so I don't mind that the fattier stuff too,
but I don't know. I like cooking all the grease out of everything. I know you get upset, but
so with the 96, four, there's a lot less of that
and it just it tastes so good but yeah um if you guys haven't you need to you don't like the grease
i don't i don't dude when i first started doing keto i would spoon it up and eat it yeah just get
it on everything did you have a mustache back then no okay. Okay. Yeah. Things might be messier.
This is a weird thing.
I can't have greasy food because then I smell it on my mustache the rest of the day and
it grosses me out.
Might get too creamy.
Wow.
Well, anyway, yeah.
Pete Martini's.
That is something about a mustache.
You always, you keep the center.
A little remnants.
You keep going.
Yep, just a little something.
They call it a flavor saver.
Flavor saver, yes!
You just take a deep breath like, oh yeah, so good.
Yeah, you guys are talking about Piedmontese beef being stuck in there, right?
Yeah, yeah, 100%.
Make sure we're on the same page.
Yeah, if you guys want to get Piedmontese remnants stuck in your mustache, head over to piedmontese beef being on the same page yeah if you guys want
to get Piedmontese remnants stuck in
your mustache head over to Piedmontese.com
that's P-I-E-D-M-O-N-T-E-S-E.com and to
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Oh, mustaches.
I'll take a shower,
but sometimes I just won't wash the mustache.
Just leave it.
Just leave it.
Just so I can go through my day just like,
oh, yes.
That's the only time you really pay attention
to wearing a face mask is to cover up
like a hair.
Like a head cap thing.
You put it over your face.
You got to preserve it.
All right.
Let's start this over.
This is way too childish.
People aren't going to want to listen to this.
Okay, guys.
Let's get serious.
What were we
talking about?
I don't know. What's that smell?
It's your upper lip.
You're like, oh, yeah, okay.
It is. All right, cool.
Now that we've established that.
All right, today we're talking about
thinking less, and we got our Think Less
shirts on. They're available on
markbellslingshot.com.
You can purchase one right now.
We've been talking quite a bit lately about thinking less.
And we don't think that you shouldn't think at all.
And I also am a huge promoter of the fact that you have control and opportunity to think about your thoughts.
You have control and opportunity to think about circumstances that you might be in each and every day, even though you might feel like they're compromising positions.
Sometimes you have control over how you look at those things and you can maybe reinterpret or
reframe those things as being positive or just something that will be more desirable towards
some of your goals. But when we think about think less, something that I've been adopting lately and something
I heard Jocko Willink talk about was to have like unflinching discipline.
And I thought to myself, like, that's really, that really locked up really well for me with
the words think less because I was listening to
something from somebody and they were talking about,
they were talking about thinking and what happens once you start to think.
Normally,
once you start to think a conflict arises,
a counterpart,
should I eat that sandwich without mayonnaise or with mayonnaise?
Should I eat that sandwich with cheese or without mayonnaise? Should I eat that sandwich with cheese or without cheese?
Should I stay on my diet?
Should I eat some ice cream?
I'm more comfortable staying in bed.
Why would I wake up early and go on, right?
As soon as you start thinking about it,
all these little things trickle in
and you start to make excuses for yourself.
Next thing you know, you're distracted
and 15 minutes
went by or 20 minutes.
Now you have another excuse.
You're like, oh, I actually got to go to work.
I actually have.
So kind of having unflinching discipline and working on thinking less and just doing has
been massively beneficial to me when I was younger.
I think I kind of did it on autopilot just because I was super naive.
So I just went and I did stuff.
I didn't think about my feelings.
I didn't think about anything.
Probably because I'm male and probably because I maybe had like an underdeveloped maturity of certain aspects of my brain.
But whatever those attributes were, they were actually really good for me because I would always just go and do shit.
And that's the thing, though.
It's great.
I'm happy you mentioned like when you were a kid, because when you're a kid, exactly,
you didn't know much things.
Right.
And you would just do things and learn things and you learn things like you'd start doing
something.
You would be naive to how little you knew about it.
Even in the beginning stages, you weren't like you sucked at basketball, but it wouldn't
stop you from going and practicing because you're like, I can get better at this.
You see people that are really good.
You're like, you actually think that you're good you think that
when you're a little kid and someone's like hey can you kick that soccer ball further than the
other kid and without ever seeing them do it you're like yep yep and you're like i mean i've i do this
with my nephews and stuff because i'm fascinated by somebody just having a brain of being seven or
eight years old and uh you know like one day we're outside throwing a
football and he's trying to throw a football, like through a tire and he missed it the first
couple of times. And then he goes, Oh, I'm not that good at this. And I was like, well, it's
because you haven't really maybe practiced it that much. You haven't tried it that much. I said,
I bet you've tried a couple more times. You'll get it. Maybe you have to be closer. And he's like,
no, no, I can do it from really far. You know, so he had that mindset, but he learned quickly. Yeah. Like it would be helpful if he was a little
closer and then he was able to make it. And he was able to see that, you know, over time with
a little bit of practice, but initially before he ever threw the ball, uh, he thought he was
going to be the next fucking Joe Montana or something like that, or Tom Brady. But once he
started to throw it, then he kind of realized. And so I think if you can be that naive to something to where you don't have any expectations
of the results, you don't have any idea about what's going to happen and you just go and
do it, it's, it can be a magnificent place to be in.
Absolutely.
And as an adult, the thing is, is like you think too much, especially when you're trying
to do something new, when you're trying to like, let's say you, you you you want to start working out or you want to pick up a new thing.
You think about it so much that most people will think of.
They'll they'll soon think of reasons why it's not going to work for them.
Like people who want to maybe start jujitsu.
Ah, I need to lose some weight before I start.
I'm not flexible enough.
They have some morning classes, but, you know, I feel like I need to be able to roll with more people. And there are only three people in that class. So I won't
really go until my work schedule makes it fit. You can think up all the reasons why you shouldn't,
even though you know you want to. Whereas when you're a kid, you're just like, I'll just go,
I'll figure it out. You know, you go and you just do the damn thing. And that's the big essence of
all of this. It's like a lot of you guys who listen to this show, you are teenagers and adults.
We're thinking about a lot of things and there are a lot of things that you want to do. But many times we
think ourselves out of just getting it done. And that the whole premise of this is just go do it,
go experience it. We have guests on the show that they talk about things and we go right into the
gym and we do it. We don't think about what we don't think about things. We just go and we do
it and we see what's beneficial. We see what's not and we keep pushing forward.
Yeah. And it's usually like the concerns that you do have for not wanting to do something
almost always are like, like when you think about, oh, what's the worst thing that can happen? It's
like, dude, it's so far from that, that actually does happen. It's almost always a net positive, like no matter what.
Even if whatever you do, you go to BJJ and you're like, oh, I'm going to suck at it.
Like, yeah, well, you're going to.
But I mean, you know, like, is that really the worst thing ever?
Like, no, you're fine.
Like, eventually you'll get good.
And then now you have a bunch of new friends and you know how to defend yourself.
Be okay with sucking.
Yeah.
It's like real talk though.
Like be okay with not being good at something when you head into the gym, you know, when
you start jujitsu, whatever it is, be okay with the movement, not feeling great.
Be okay with having to start with the absolute basics on something because you can progress
at it if you just go and you start doing something
about it.
I think that we have a tendency to, to think of a lot of stuff that's like not there or
not available for the moment.
Yeah.
And you think that things are going to be better when this happens or when that happens.
Those are, those are places where you're a little lost in thought at the moment.
And you'll notice sometimes if you're paying attention that you're
breathing, your heart rate, like these things can be kind of going at an erratic pace when you start
to think about stuff that you don't have or the stuff that you need that's currently like not
there. And I think the best thing to do is to to calm yourself down, is to think about what you
have now and what opportunities lie ahead of you.
You know, people say kind of like live in the moment.
And I know it might be a cliche thing to say, but literally that can help bring down some anxiety for you
because you can say, okay, well, what's manageable right now?
What's something I can do?
I remember the dentist that we had on recently, he was talking about what's like one thing,
no matter how small it is, that you could do towards your goal.
Like he didn't care.
He's like, it doesn't matter how, it doesn't matter how much of a feeble attempt that you
think it is that you, um, I don't know.
You tried salmon for the first time just because you heard it was a healthy protein choice
and you thought fish was disgusting, but at least you fucking, at least you tried it or you try to insert one healthy meal per day rather than trying to be on some specific
hardcore diet that you don't think at the moment that you can manage.
You know, the funny thing is like, okay guys, I'm sorry.
I'm going to say this.
Some people are probably like you and SEMA, you're nasty.
But, um, I, you know,
the water floss thing, that was the main thing I was using before we had our dentist on. Like I'd
floss every now and then, but I didn't floss often. And after we had him on, by the way,
if you guys are listening to this, I don't know if that episode's out yet, but we had a dentist on
and we talked a lot about a lot of stuff as far as your mouth health is concerned.
And just I'm flossing now.
Got right on it.
So did I.
Yeah, I got right back on it.
I'm not missing a day because it's I want my teeth when I'm older.
I was like, I could use more of this in my life.
I did the same thing.
Yeah.
But, you know, I don't know if anybody I like a lot of these self-development books or whatever.
And I learn a lot from them self-development books or whatever.
And I learn a lot from them.
But there's this book called The Five-Second Rule by Mel Robbins.
And I've talked to you about this one before.
I read this one four years ago, I think, four or five years ago.
And the whole premise of The Five-Second Rule – and there have been thousands of people that have messaged you how their life has been changed. But the whole premise is that when you have a thought about something, for example, when you get out of bed in the morning, don't like you need to get yourself moving in the direction of what you need to do in five seconds.
Build that habit. Like when you wake up, open your eyes, count from five, four, and within that five seconds, go and do.
Because the whole idea is that after that, you're going to start thinking of reasons why you probably shouldn't think about this. You're trying to do the 20,000 step a day challenge
and you know, you need to just walk out the door and just go take a few steps outside and walk,
put on your shoes and go walk or have your shoes outside your bedroom door, put them on, go,
go to your door and start walking, get the momentum going. Because you know that once
you get that momentum going, once you start doing it and you stop thinking about how,
how difficult it's going to be to start walking and all that, you'll just
get it. You'll, you'll go and you'll feel good afterwards. What do you think will happen if you
wait around to be hit with some sudden spell of motivation? Probably ain't going to happen. Yeah.
And we've talked about this many times. I mean, there's a lot of, for people that are more science
based, there's a lot of evidence showing that once you start moving, that dopamine is produced in your brain.
So once you get moving, you'll actually notice sometimes, sometimes it takes a little bit more than just movement.
Sometimes it takes actual, like a little physical exertion, a little bit of pushing, which sucks because you're like, I just don't want to push right now.
pushing, which is, which sucks because you're like, I just don't want to push right now.
But I'll tell you the second that you do.
And the second that you get past that little, it could even be like as little as like 30 seconds of exertion.
And you could be like, there it is.
Now I'm, now I'm in, and now you're in a completely different world.
Moments ago, you didn't even feel like walking.
And now next thing you know, you're running.
You're like, well, how the fuck did that happen?
It's because movement promotes movement. Just as I've said, many times success breeds success. Once you, once you start to be, once you start to, uh,
initiate a lot of habits that are successful, uh, you will eventually become successful.
And once you are successful, uh, the remnants left behind is someone of a successful person.
Someone can kind of point to all the dots.
And they'll be similar in this person that's successful at being a financial planner,
just as it'll be similar to this other person who is a UFC champion.
They'll be identical.
The successes that they've had, the disciplines they had, there'll be some things that'll be identical the the success uh successes that they've had the disciplines they
had there'll be some things that'll be a little different amongst them obviously but for the most
part there'll be four five six things where you're like oh my god that guy does that that oh that guy
wakes up early oh so does that guy oh that guy you know make sure he does this before he goes to bed
so he gets a good night's sleep oh that guy you know and're going to have all these habits pile up and you're like,
ah,
that's how it happens.
And one of those big habits,
like that,
one of the habits that I need to build for myself is the habit of not
thinking myself out of certain situations because it,
it,
I,
through the years I have found that that has been something somewhat of a
weakness of mine.
Like I would have an idea on something,
but then I just sit too long
on it. And I would just like something else would come up and I would just, I would just think
myself out of doing it at that moment in time. So this is something that I had to remind myself
to do. And it's just like anything else, just like having good nutrition, just like
getting in your exercise, just like getting good sleep each night and having a ritual before that.
This is kind of a habit, you know, like like if you there are certain things you need to do make a list of the things you need to do and the first
thing that you can literally get done go do it like go just go do it and that's why like legit
like on my phone screen this has been on my phone screen ever since we had andre in the gym because
when he when he when he came to the gym like i was like god damn that's me man like i like i need to
do more of that i need to get
better at that because i see people like yourself and people who are just highly productive
individuals they're just thing next on to the next on to the next they're just tacking things down
yeah and i personally need to think less a bit too because i don't have at the moment i don't
have great access to being like spontaneous you know you guys notice like you around me a lot.
Like I don't react much to anything, but that's, you know, it, it, what's where it's nice is
that I stay pretty even, but where it sucks is that I stay pretty even, you know?
So like, but where I need to think less and something that I can improve upon greatly
would be, um, to not have any concern about how I look or how I feel in a
certain moment and just roll with it and don't worry about what other people think of it.
As much as I want to say, oh, I don't give a fuck about what I totally care about what people say.
I totally care about what people think. It's just, you know, maybe there's other people that can do
a better job of blocking some of that out. But like, I don't want to be made a fool of,
or I don't want to feel foolish, but like, as I'm getting older, I'm getting more and more
comfortable in my own skin and I'm getting more comfortable kind of saying like almost whatever
I feel or whatever I think, and then trying to surround whatever it is that I, that I said with
words that make sense to me at that moment, or that can make sense to other people on why I,
you know,
feel or think a certain way.
So we all have areas to work on,
but I think ultimately you can view a lot of these things as weaknesses.
We don't have,
we don't have much of a problem pointing out our strengths,
you know,
but I think it's a good idea to kind of hone in on those strengths and to
like lean into those more and say this, I'm actually pretty good at this.
Okay.
This feels good.
I bet I could even be better at this because I'm only just getting started with this.
Like people have recognized me as being someone that's creative.
And then once you kind of hear that about yourself, you kind of perk up and you're like,
okay, I think I am creative.
Let me lean into that. Let me see what that means. I think I can create more products. I think I can, after a while you start to think, Hmm, maybe kind
of like within reason I can kind of create anything. Uh, but where there's, where there's
a lot of weakness, a lot of times what I hear from a lot of people is they'll say, man, I'm not
creative. And, and to me, like, that's,
that's a, that's a weakness. Like you should not talk about yourself that way. You should just say,
Hey, at the moment, I'm not very creative at the moment moment, but I can work towards being
creative because being creative is, uh, just as simple as thinking of the complete opposite of
something. So if, if you, if you were like, oh, okay, I'm going to sell water bottles,
you could say, oh, I wonder what it would look like if I sold an empty bottle.
And you would think, who the fuck would ever buy an empty bottle?
But when I was a kid, empty bottles didn't exist.
These water bottles that everyone was walking around with all the time,
these metal things or whatever the fuck they are,
that they sell for like $ bucks those were not created and people people at that time didn't even really
drink that much water but now it's a thing everyone's got like their water thing that
they're walking around with i know rich piana used to sell those five percenter jugs yeah right
and and tons of people had those and yeah it was something that people filled up. So you might think this is the dumbest if you actually intentionally like I know we're talking about think less.
But if you but if you're trying to be creative, there does have to be some thought in there.
But you can literally try to think of the dumbest thing that you can possibly conjure up.
And it will actually probably most likely end up being a halfway decent idea
if you think it through more i'll give you just a quick example if i said in sema you know what i
was thinking the other day man i was lifting and i was like i was thinking about lifting and when
you flex you know it kind of almost feels like a shock or a burn so i i want to hook up these
electrodes to us when we're lifting and they'll fucking zap us while we're training.
Well, people have people utilize things like this before.
They've hooked electrodes up to help with to possibly help with hypertrophy or things like that. in a completely opposite direction of what it is that you were or what it was that anybody else was considering could lead to a multimillion dollar invention of some sort.
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how do you i almost called you magic i was like magic i'll take it yeah all right well magic
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And the really dope thing, I think it's like, it's, it works its way in is that we
have so many different guests that come on the show. Like Dr. Madahi, the dentist that you guys
are going to get this episode from later. Um, like Ben Patrick, uh, all like Mike is to tell
all these individuals that come on and we learn different things from them. Um, as we go and we
do more things, these things are new for a little bit, but over time they get easier to apply, easier to do, and they take less effort and less thought to now do. It's like, as you're,
as you're, you know, you're, you're listening to all the people we have on and you're doing things
initially, it takes a little bit to do them, but as you get better, you will think less about it.
It will become something that's habitual. Same thing with lifting.
Like initially when you're learning how to deadlift, you're thinking about all the technique that it takes.
You're thinking about all the different cues.
You do it long enough.
You can just walk up to a bar and execute without doing any type of thought.
Jiu-jitsu is the same thing.
Initially, for a while, it's rough. But then you get to a point where you can just execute these movements without thinking.
But it's that continuous aspect of continuing to learn more will allow you to think less about it.
When we were walking, what were you also doing when we were walking?
I was talking to my mom.
Yeah, you're talking to your mom on the phone.
You're not thinking at all about your feet.
They just happen to be perpetually fucking going left, right, left, right, left, right.
There's no thought and you
see the difference in the curb as you're talking on the phone your eyes see it your mind is auto
correcting it's like um it's almost like uh it's almost like you're on some sort of autopilot of
some kind obviously like you're experiencing it and you're in control if you wanted to run or jump
or whatever you you could you could go on the other side of the street or whatever but um there's not a lot of thought into
into a lot of these things but you do have to figure out a way to get yourself kind of moving
in the first place i think that's probably the hardest part for a lot of people it is and that's
where just immediately taking action on whatever it is that you want to do. That's where that comes in.
Like you need to not, you can't let the, I was talking to a friend about this yesterday because there's someone that I knew that like had a lot of things that they actually had the ability to do.
But the main reason why they never got started on it or they always got started and did things in a very halfway manner and then quit immediately was because they always feared that they would fail at it in the end.
And the problem with that is no matter what it is that you do, you going to fail at it for a little bit, like, and not even fail.
I don't want to use the word fail because that like it gives people such a negative connotation.
You're going to stumble a lot.
Like you start a new diet.
You're going to stumble a lot. You're going to have a few binges. You're going to stumble a lot. Like you start a new diet, you're going to stumble a lot.
You're going to have a few binges.
You're going to have a few mistakes.
Often, but you course correct.
You learn.
You learn what you shouldn't do.
You learn the right things to do
to make sure it's easier.
And then over time, you make it.
You get to whatever goal you were trying to get to.
But if you don't start,
you're not even giving yourself the chance to do that.
So you need to not think about something that hasn't even fucking happened yet.
That's anxiety.
Just worrying and thinking about something, a failure that you haven't even had, that
stops you from taking action in the very beginning aspects of things.
It would be so cool to ask James Smith about some of this on an upcoming podcast, but see
how much you two have been following along and paying attention um
where does knowledge come from how's it how's it created
i know the answer wait knowledge oh shit i don't know okay no i'm kidding um where do you guys
think knowledge is created it's created knowledge is created? It's created. Knowledge is created.
My initial guess is action of some kind.
I mean, I'll just take a stab at it.
Failure.
There you go.
That's it.
There we go.
I don't remember if you ever said that before.
Yeah.
I say it often.
Sorry.
Shows you how much you fucking do it.
You guys listen.
It's my first time listening to the show.
Longtime caller.
My bad.
Both you guys are in lots of trouble right now.
But I got the answer right.
I'm still in trouble?
We'll be talking after the show.
Yep.
I was like, y'all should have known this.
This is part of the curriculum.
You should have answered it better.
Faster.
Are my parents going to have to sign up?
Action leads to failure, which leads to knowledge.
You guys both nailed it.
You guys both nailed it.
That's how knowledge is created.
So, again, if you put a lot of – I mean, it makes sense to think about certain things. going to be like danger you know like you know you don't want to just you know randomly uh decide to
do something on a whim that could potentially hurt you or or injure you for you know i think that's
why we think in the first place is to kind of weigh out the pros and cons and we sit there and
we go okay but where thought can be devastating is it it can slow you down and prevent you from doing something
that could otherwise be pushing you towards the right direction.
Like if you go in a direction, like I've talked about this before, like on your phone, you're
trying to look like you're trying to walk to a pizza place or something and you look
at your phone and you're trying to figure out which way to go.
Well, the fastest way to learn the right way to go is to get started.
And then you get started and you go, oh, shit, that thing's tracking me and I'm actually
walking away from it.
Oh, let me go this way.
And now I'm walking towards it.
It's like that simple sometimes to be able to course correct and to get back on track.
But when you overthink, you have a tendency to let a lot of self-doubt creep in.
And the idea that you had that was great, I know a lot of people do this, they have
an idea at night and they think about it like, that's a really cool idea.
They might even write it down.
Sometimes we forget to write it down.
You wake up the next day, you're like, what the fuck was that idea?
You write it down.
You wake up in the morning and you look at it and you go,
that is not that good of an idea, I don't think.
You text one of your friends something about it
and they kind of shoot it down because it sounds dumb to them
because you didn't really explain it to them yet or whatever.
And then you're like, yep, it's a dumb idea.
You don't want to let self-doubt creep in.
For me, there's stuff that I need to work on.
I just wrote down a couple things like um the not smart thing like i still dwell on that and who the fuck knows why like
there's i don't have any evidence that i'm not smart or that i'm not capable of learning other
things it's a complete uh false thing that i made up in my own head just based off of uh having some
difficult times in school 9,000 years ago.
Organized.
I say that about myself sometimes.
I'm not an organized person.
Well, does that mean that you have to be a fucking mess?
Does that mean your closet has to be a mess? Does that mean you don't possess the ability to be organized at all?
Like am I not organized in all aspects of my life?
No.
That's actually totally not true.
There's some areas where I choose to not be organized because I'm thinking or dwelling on
stuff rather than just doing stuff. You know, like you notice that if you, if you get into the
habit of my wife, she's glad she doesn't listen to this, but if you get into the habit of cleaning dishes the moment that you just finished eating, it's just like a habitual thing.
You don't even really think about it, right?
As opposed to you get done, you just kind of leave the dishes out.
Now the pan is dirty, the plates are dirty.
You're thinking about cooking and you're like, I'm just going to order something because
now you have this tiny roadblock that would only take you a few minutes to fix.
Right.
But a lot of this self-doubt and a lot of these things, they tend to pile up.
And the last thing I wrote down was that I'm always late.
So you think that you're like a late person or you think you're stop thinking, like don't allow those thoughts to even come in.
Block those thoughts by just taking action and just getting to it.
How many people say they're like, oh, man, I'm more of a night owl person.
I'm more of a night person, you know, or yeah, I can't I can't wake up.
I can't wake up early or I can't stay up late like any of things, like saying any of those things in a negative
context just isn't great because now it locks you in as you're only this kind of person.
And you're you just told yourself you gave yourself like an insurance policy that you
are now OK to act that way or you're OK to be that way.
I'm always late.
So now I get to always be late.
You can always count on me.
Like it's just – it's kind of nonsense.
And we need to maybe just think less and buck and just go towards our opportunities as much as we can.
Absolutely.
Go ahead. No, I was just going to say like the whole thing about like having an idea that you think is good and then you spend a split second thinking about how it's not a good idea.
And then, you know, it just, it sucks because like, it just, I,
I'm going to say it's like thrown at my face every day, but I,
I genuinely do not mean this as a bad thing in SEMA,
but it's how you've taken TikTok and exploded on there.
Like I had the same thoughts almost two years ago now,
but the more I looked at the app and I was like, wow, this doesn't make sense for a company and the podcast to really be on TikTok.
Like, and I tried a couple of things and like some things hit, but they weren't like that great.
And so because I gave myself all these negative thoughts, all these negative, like I doubted myself so much that I was like, ah, you know, I guess it's not the right fit.
And then here we are almost two years later.
And it's like, it's so obviously like very much important and should have been happening this whole time.
So things like that will come and go.
And I'm just like, fuck, I should have just kept doing that.
Like, you know, whatever.
So now that's like I have to.
Again, it's not like something I think about all the time, but it's like a very obvious thing that I could have thought less about and just went all in and said, fuck it.
I don't care if anybody thinks that this app is dumb.
Like I should just go for it anyways.
I've had people tell me before, like at trade shows, they're like, oh, the slingshot.
I thought of that.
And I'm always like, that was your first mistake.
I never thought about it.
I just fucking made it.
Here it is.
You got to just it's hard.
It's not easy.
It's not an easy thing to like just to try to always put things in action.
But your cue to move your fucking ass is when you tell yourself not to move.
As soon as you tell yourself that you should stay in your warm, cuddly bed and snuggle up next to the wifey's butt cheeks, that's the moment that you need to be like, yep, time to get up.
But it's so nice.
It's kind of hard.
Oh, okay.
Oh, yeah.
That's my mustache.
Yeah, man.
No, you know what I think?
And I definitely hope we talk about this in another episode.
But I think that I know that just by being surrounded by you, Andrew, you, Mark,
I know that just by being surrounded by you, Andrew, you, Mark, the people here at Slingshot, that like the people here, we all have different things that we're strong at. We have certain types of weaknesses, but there is a general idea of doing and momentum and just like just fucking do it.
And when you have people around you that are like that, it does help it make it easier to turn that into an action or turn that into something that you continuously do. So in essence,
I'm going to keep this part short, but I hope we do another episode on this because
I think I felt the most, I feel the most strongly about this idea this year
is that the people around you will determine your trajectory. And I've discovered
that I've known that for a long time. I've read that in so many books, but I think I have
experienced it in the strongest absolute manner this year because of certain people that aren't
in my life anymore. And that has made one of the biggest positive.
This year has been the best year of my life.
And I can say that without a doubt,
without a doubt.
That's dope.
Right.
And it's, it's like,
it's because I have,
I,
there's very good people around me and the people around me that shouldn't have been there.
I finally gotten them out.
And that has led me into just such a,
it's,
it's, it's,
it's disgustingly crazy how much better my life is currently because of that.
And why we'll,
we'll talk about this on another episode,
but it's like,
it is night and day.
So make like,
pay attention to the people around you.
If you've got people around you that are continuing to say negative things that are
continuing to take negative actions that are continuing to drop your ideas and shit on the things that you're trying to
do that that that don't that don't try to encourage you out of your negative self-talk but instead
they try to tell you oh yeah these are why you can't do these certain things yo you need to run
in the other fucking direction you need to get out of that that's all i'm gonna say about that but
yeah yeah i mean they're gonna people that are
you know maybe not right like i don't really like to even say that people are negative necessarily
but um just people that maybe aren't right in your life for a particular time period or they're not
right any longer for a particular time period um they're gonna kind of encourage the self-doubt, you know, they're going to
throw stuff your way that you might have already kind of halfway thought about.
I mean, this is why sometimes people in relationships, they won't bring something up to somebody
else because they're like, I thought you were going to shoot it down if I said anything,
you know, if I said, you know, I mean, it could be like the littlest thing, but they're
in relationships.
This is definitely another podcast, but in relationships, there's there are no small things.
Like if it matters to somebody, it fucking matters, you know, and it needs to be.
It doesn't necessarily need to be a big deal, but it is a deal.
And it's something that needs to be communicated about.
needs to be communicated about.
I think, you know, in terms of like trying to, you know,
wrap some of this up, I know for myself,
like just doing has been really helpful and going out on my walks and different things.
Like I've learned so many things just from literally going outside and just
walking and having this kind of unflinching discipline as of late has been really helpful or
just having that cue in my head. Because again, as soon as you get the cue to like,
that wants to talk you out of something, it'd be nice if you did it even before that,
but it'll take you a moment to learn it. Like the second that you have the idea for something,
go do something. Because once, once the idea sits there for a minute and you get, have an opportunity
to think about it, thinking starts on the level.
As soon as there's a problem.
Now you have a problem situation that arises that you made up in your head on why you can't
do something.
And now you're in this fucking fight with yourself.
This is anxiety.
This is stress. This is stress.
This is all stuff that you just don't need.
You already, you already had a good choice laid out in front of you.
Just, I mean, I know that we do this with our food sometimes, you know, with like Piedmontese
and we've talked before about how sometimes we have a craving and we're like, oh man,
it'd be great to stop at this place.
And then you're like, no, drive home, drive home, drive home eat your fucking pecan teas you know and boom then you do it and
then you're and then you feel great like once you once you actually live inside the decision that
you knew was best for you in the first place once you're there you're like celebrating like this is
fucking great like i'm glad that i i'm really glad that i didn't do that like fuck that was really smart
that i chose to eat better again next day on the scale you see it next day in the mirror you see it
you're like that was the fucking right decision i knew it yeah and if if you go searching for
something you'll find it right so if whatever the idea is you'll will you will find a negative or
something why you shouldn't do whatever that idea is.
I wonder why is it so hard to find the opposite?
You know, like, why would this be a good idea?
Like, I mean, I guess the same answers are there, but maybe we just don't see them as much because they're not as dang detrimental.
I'm not sure what that is, but it's weird that our psyche won't allow us to see the positives right away.
It's straight to the negative.
I don't think it's that it won't. I think it's that we don't train us to see the positives right away. It's straight to the negative.
I don't think it's that it won't.
I think it's that we don't train ourselves to do that.
Because there are certain things that I do that immediately I'm going to go like, this is why you probably should do this.
I think it's more so when things are unknown and they're kind of foreign to you and you haven't had much experience with it. When you have an initial thought about it sometimes you're like since it's it's not assured
you're not sure what the outcome will be let's say you've never done or you haven't done much
jujitsu and it's still taking you a little bit to build up the courage to go to practice
well you still have you've only done done three sessions so you're there's a part of your mind
that's like ah it's your body's feeling like this whatever but when you've been doing it for years
fucking going putting your gi on and going to practice is like brushing your teeth
right so it's just like you in essence you kind of want to train yourself to start thinking about
the reasons why you should do things because as you do that more it gets easier to do that
but if you're if you consistently do think of the negatives in situations and it's not that that like
like yeah we have to weigh the pros and cons to make sure we're doing things safely, of course.
But I believe that you can train yourself to just try to look at the reasons why things should be done.
But you have to be intentional about it initially.
Yeah, you're trying to play a long game.
You know, you're trying to go after like long term.
I mean, just think about it this way.
This is not entirely true all the time. And this is part of what makes us human
and part of what makes things like seductive and things like
appealing, you know, to like lean towards. Right.
But most of the time, things that are more
in line with like long-term gratification
rather than short-term gratification, uh, are going to be the things that you want to
kind of organize.
I think your life around really, you know, the short term might be to like hook up with
somebody, you know, real quick on one random night or whatever.
Right.
Um, in the longterm, you know, it might be that you are trying to have an established relationship
so that you live out the rest of your life with somebody else.
Maybe that's your ideal and you think that's in your best interest.
Other examples would be with your diet, you know, like you've got the short-term gratification
of eating some cookies. Right.
But the detriment of some of those things sometimes are that it,
it takes you down a road that is for me,
it takes me,
it takes me on a journey that makes me continue to think about those foods
and I'll be,
I'll be stuck there.
And if I just,
if I,
if I didn't think about the fucking cookies
or I didn't allow that to get in there in the first place
and I just stuck to what my original plan was,
I wouldn't be off and running with eating cookies
and then ice cream and whatever else starts to dance around in my head.
I heard a pretty good quote the other day.
I think I was listening to,
I think I was listening to Lex Friedman's podcast
and I'm not sure who this came from exactly,
but basically it goes something like this.
It said, to feel different, you must see differently.
To see differently, you must gain knowledge
that is currently not there.
You must, oh, and in order to do that,
you must experience new things.
So that's exactly what Nsema pointed out.
Like, don't be afraid.
Screenshot that sentence.
Send that to me.
That's great.
Yeah.
I'll read it again.
To feel differently,
you must see differently.
To see differently,
you must gain knowledge
that you don't currently have.
And to gain knowledge
that you don't currently have, you must gain knowledge that you don't currently have you must experience
new things action and you know i know sometimes people think that like tony robbins is like uh
you know a little silly or whatever they don't like the cheerleading or some people don't like
that kind of enthusiasm for whatever reason.
I actually think it's kind of cool.
I just take it in dosages, you know, but, uh, Tony Robbins is somebody that talks a
lot about action.
Just, just, I mean, people pay $10,000 to go, to go see him talking about, Hey, you
shouldn't be here.
You know, you should be out doing shit.
And that's, that's kind of the truth of it.
Yeah. That that's that's kind of the truth of it yeah that that's it take us on home andrew sure to think i was just thinking even though we're
trying to think less but so you guys again i keep bringing it up but my fucking air conditioner not
being out so we kind of got it patched up to where it can work right now, but it's almost like on a – we just put a Band-Aid on it.
Air conditioner is running, and then the power goes out in the entire house.
And it turns out it's not just our house.
It's like the whole block.
So I'm like, sick.
All right, cool.
I had Piedmontese steak tips ready to go, and then now I was going to just put them in an air fryer.
I was like, now I guess I can put them in the smoker, but I'm like dang it like fine let's just there's no air right now so let's just go to in
and out and we'll sit down and eat there okay no big deal we get there and stephanie's phone
she's like our power's back on and before i could even consider like because the car was off we had
really good parking in and out it's always packed and we're right in the front before i could even think about it i'm like nope literally like door was
open like shut the door and got back in the car and went back home and had piedmont teas for dinner
yeah and so like by no means was i trying to practice thinking less it was just like i know
for a fact if i eat in and out i will be upset with myself later knowing that I had this other option that's already ready to go.
Like I could have already been doing it, but I just – I was being a bitch.
I didn't want to sit in a hot house and eat food.
So I'm like, ah, like nope.
Like I was already like kind of upset because I had all this planned out and then the fucking power went out.
Yeah.
So I don't know.
Even without trying to think less, like I did it, and it was just a complete net positive.
Like I felt good, went home, smashed that, watched the Wu-Tang series.
Like it was a perfect night.
And, you know, the air conditioner was back on.
There we fucking go.
Yeah.
So it was cool.
But anyway, yeah, so the Think Less shirt, our first Power Project podcast apparel is going to be available,
or it is available, I think.
MarkBellSlingshot.com.
By the time you guys are listening to this, it definitely will be available if you're on the live stream.
I think it's available right now.
I'm looking for it.
Maybe I'm not looking for the right thing.
So maybe the website still needs to be updated.
But whatever the case, as soon as I can, I will link that in the description as well as the podcast show notes.
And a huge shout out and thank you to Pete Montes, especially for that steak tips I had last night.
It's amazing.
Links to them down in the description as well as the podcast show notes and promo code PowerProject will save you 25% off your entire order.
Follow the podcast at Mark Wells PowerProject on Instagram, at MBPowerProject on TikTok and Twitter.
My Instagram and Twitter is at IamAndrew Andrew Z at the Andrew Z on tick tock.
Jean-Claude and daddy.
Where are you at?
Let's go.
I didn't see any on Instagram and YouTube.
I didn't see my yin yang on tick tock and Twitter.
Mark.
I've heard some people before say to drown out the voice of self doubt.
What we're trying to encourage you to do is to not ever let it speak in the first
place strength is never weakness weakness never strength i'm at mark smelly bell catch you guys
later