Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Here's Why You Should Read "The War of Art"
Episode Date: November 10, 2017Contrary to the title, it’s not just for artists. It’s for anyone that wants to make a good life for themselves and their families. It’s a tribute to persistence and industry, and some of its co...re messages are… Don’t just wander through life from pillar to post. Find something that matters to you and pursue it passionately. Don’t whine about how much hard work it takes to succeed. Learn to love the work and despise failure and quitting, instead. Don’t let your feelings dictate your actions. What you want is rarely what you need, and you can create the right feelings by taking the right actions. Don’t wait for inspiration. That’s how amateurs stay amateurs. Do the work, grind it out, and eventually you’ll get inspired. These bits of advice are all well and good, but what really makes it stand out among the many other books that say many of the same things is it doesn’t just tell us what we “should” be doing to succeed, which is pretty commonsensical, really, but it goes deeper, and tries to get at WHY we find it so hard. The biggest obstacle in our way, Pressfield says, is something he calls “Resistance,” which is the central theme of the book. He defines Resistance as a mysterious force within us that works to sabotage our dreams and abilities and prevent us from creating the life that we really want. Pressfield points out that most of us have two lives, the life we live, and the unlived life within us, and Resistance’s sole mission is to ensure that we never realize that unlived life. That we remain small, weak, and unhappy. That’s why Resistance resists any act that rejects immediate gratification in favor of long-term growth, health, or integrity. It will tell us anything to keep us from doing any of those things. It will feed us all kinds of enticing excuses, justifications, and bargains. You know...we’re too tired right now...we can just do it later...we’ve been working hard enough or maybe even too hard...why not start next week...does it really matter?...is it really that important? We’ve all been there, and I think Pressfield is right that this alone is one of the biggest barriers that we face in creating the type of life that we want. Want to be notified when my next book recommendation goes live? Hop on my email list and you’ll get each new installment delivered directly to your inbox. Click here: https://www.muscleforlife.com/signup/
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The fact that something is hard isn't a sign that you don't belong in the arena.
The struggle is how you prove you're worthy.
Hey, this is Mike from Muscle for Life, and I'm often asked about books. People ask me for book
recommendations on various topics. They ask me what book I am currently reading and
what books I have recently read and what my favorite books are and so forth. And as an avid
reader, I am always happy to oblige and get some book recommendations in return as well.
I also just like to encourage people to read as much as possible because I think that knowledge
benefits you much like compound interest benefits your bank
account in that the more you learn the more you know and the more you know the more you can do
and the more you can do the more opportunities you have to succeed and on the flip side i also
believe that there is little hope for people who aren't perpetual learners. I know that might sound a little bit pessimistic or
cynical to you, but let's face it, life is overwhelmingly complex and chaotic. And if we
look around, we can find plenty of evidence that it simply suffocates and devours the lazy and
ignorant. So if you are a bookworm and you're on the lookout for good reads, or if you'd like to
just get into the habit of reading more, then this book club is for you. The idea is very simple. Every week, I'm going to share a book
that I've particularly liked, and I'm going to tell you why I liked it and give you several of
my key takeaways from it. I'm also going to keep these episodes short and sweet so you can quickly
decide whether or not a book is likely to be up your alley or not.
Okay, so let's get to this week's book, and it is The War of Art by Steven Pressfield. Now,
contrary to the title, this book isn't just for artists. I think it's for anyone that wants to
make a better life for themselves and their friends and their families and everyone
else that might be in their sphere of influence. It is a tribute to persistence in industry,
and some of its core messages are don't just wander through life from pillar to post. Find
something that really matters to you and pursue it passionately. Don't whine about how much hard work it really takes to succeed.
Instead, learn to love the work, embrace the work, and to despise failure and quitting instead.
Don't let your feelings dictate your actions.
Unfortunately, what we want is rarely what we need.
And what we want to do in many cases is rarely what we need
to do. And if we know that we can create the right feelings by simply taking the right actions.
It also tells us to not wait for inspiration because that's how amateurs stay amateurs.
Instead, we need to learn how to do the work, grind it out, and eventually we will feel inspired.
Now, these bits of advice are all well and good, but what really makes this book stand out among
the many other books that say many of the same things is The War of Art doesn't just tell us
what we should be doing in order to succeed, which for the most part is pretty commonsensical.
in order to succeed, which for the most part is pretty commonsensical. Instead, it goes a bit deeper and it tries to get at why we find it so hard to do the things that we know we need to do.
And the biggest obstacle in our way, Pressfield says, is something that he calls resistance,
which is really the central theme of the book. He defines resistance as a mysterious force within us that really works to
sabotage our dreams and abilities and prevent us from ultimately creating the life that we really
want. Pressfield points out that most of us have two lives, really. We have the life that we live,
and then we have the unlived life within us, the life that we wish we were living. And resistance's
sole mission is to ensure that we never realize that unlived life. Resistance wants to make sure
that we remain small, weak, and unhappy. And that's why it resists any act that rejects
immediate gratification in favor of long-term growth, health, or integrity. It will tell us
anything to keep us from doing any of those things. It will feed us all kinds of enticing
excuses and justifications and bargains. It'll say that we're too tired right now,
or we can just do it later, or maybe it's not really as important as we thought,
or maybe we've been working really hard and maybe even too hard. Maybe we can just do it later, or maybe it's not really as important as we thought, or maybe we've been working really hard and maybe even too hard. Maybe we should just
take our foot off the gas and take a break. Why not start next week? Is it really that big of a
deal? I mean, really, is it even all that important at all? Should we really even do it?
Those are the siren calls of resistance and we've all been there. So I really think that Pressfield is spot
on with his observation here in that one of the biggest barriers that we face in creating
the life that we want is resistance. And this isn't really even a new concept. It isn't
Pressfield's idea per se. Freud said as much back in the early 1900s when he wrote that
psychoanalytic treatment may in general be conceived of as such a re-education in overcoming internal resistances.
So in fact, I wouldn't be surprised if Pressfield swiped the idea from Freud. But regardless,
Pressfield does a great job explaining how it works and giving some practical ideas on how
we can overcome it. So let's get to the takeaways
here. Here's the first one. Quote, if the muse exists, she does not whisper to the untalented.
And my note here is that the famous painter and photographer Chuck Close is famous for saying
that inspiration is for amateurs. The rest of us just show up and get to work. And I think that
that is 100% spot on. And I think you
can also just replace inspiration with motivation and it is equally valid. So if you or I or anyone
decide to wait for the just right mixture or intensity of feelings before we will allow
ourselves to do the things that we know we really should be doing to get to the
places where we really want to go, we are doomed. The only reliable way to feel inspired or motivated
is to create those feelings through action. It's the feeling of forward motion and momentum that
inspires and motivates us to keep on going, not the mysterious workings
of our unconscious minds. Hey, quickly, before we carry on, if you are liking my podcast,
would you please help spread the word about it? Because no amount of marketing or advertising
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So if you are enjoying this episode and you think of someone else who might enjoy it as well,
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It really helps me.
And if you are going to post about it on social media, definitely tag me so I can say thank you.
You can find me on Instagram at MuscleForLifeFitness,
Twitter at MuscleForLife, and Instagram at MuscleForLifeFitness, Twitter at MuscleForLife,
and Facebook at MuscleForLifeFitness. Takeaway number two, quote, like a magnetized needle
floating on a surface of oil, resistance will unfailingly point to true north, meaning that
calling or action at most wants to stop us from doing. We can use this. We can use it as a compass.
We can navigate by resistance, letting it guide us to that calling or action that we must
follow before all others. Rule of thumb, the more important a call or action is to our soul's
evolution, the more resistance we will feel toward pursuing it. And my note here is that
the fact that something is hard isn't a sign that it's
probably not worth it. The struggle is the point. The struggle is how it signals its worth and
potential to transform. So the fact that something is hard isn't a sign that you don't belong in the
arena. The struggle is how you prove you're worthy. Epictetus, the influential
Greek philosopher, wrote about this in his discourses. He said,
What would have become of Hercules, do you think, if there had been no lion, hydra,
stag, or boar, and no savage criminals to rid the world of? What would he have done in the
absence of such challenges? Obviously, he would have just rolled over in bed and gone back to sleep. So by snoring his life away in luxury and comfort, he never would have
developed into the mighty Hercules. And even if he had, what good would have done him? What would
have been the use of those arms, that physique, and that noble soul without crises or conditions
to stir him into action? And the moral of this simple little allegory extends
far beyond just Greek mythology. I think it really strikes at a fundamental aspect of human nature,
and that is we really can only be as great as our circumstances demand. Okay, takeaway number three,
quote, grandiose fantasies are a symptom of resistance. They're the sign of an amateur.
The professional has learned that success, like happiness, comes as a by symptom of resistance. They're the sign of an amateur. The professional has learned
that success, like happiness, comes as a byproduct of work. The professional concentrates on the work
and allows rewards to come or not come, whatever they like. My note here is that I'm all for
hitching your wagon to a star and dreaming big dreams, but if you're not willing to work at least 10 times as hard as you think
you'll have to work to actually see those dreams come to fruition, you're almost guaranteed to
fail. So much so that I would probably say don't even try. One of the hallmarks of a true professional
is that he or she focuses almost exclusively on the work involved and rarely mentions anything else.
Takeaway number four, quote,
Someone once asked the Spartan King Leonidas to identify the supreme warrior virtue from which all others flowed.
He replied, contempt for death.
For us artists, read failure.
Contempt for failure is our cardinal virtue.
And my note here is, this of, extends to everyone, not just artists. And I think it
should include not just contempt for failure, but contempt for hard work, contempt for pain,
discomfort, setbacks, naysayers, anything physical, emotional, or even spiritual that
might get in our way. Many of the greatest achievers in history all had this type of dismissive attitude toward
obstacles and barriers. They didn't care how difficult their goals were going to be. They
didn't care how hard they were going to have to work. They didn't care how much they were going
to have to sacrifice. They just threw themselves wholly and completely into their endeavors.
And a perfect example of this is how Elon Musk described his founding of SpaceX to Ray Dalio,
whose book Principles is very good and is going to be featured in one of these episodes, by the way.
And Elon said, for a long time, I've thought that it's inevitable that something bad is going to happen on a planetary scale, a plague, a meteor that will require humanity to start over somewhere else like Mars.
One day, I went to the NASA website to see what progress they were making on their Mars program, and I realized that they weren't even thinking about going there anytime soon.
$180 million when my partners and I sold PayPal. And it occurred to me that if I spent $90 million and used it to acquire some ICBMs from the former USSR and sent one to Mars, I could inspire the
exploration of Mars. And when Ray asked him about his background in rocketry, Elon said he didn't
have one. I just started reading books, is what he said. And that's just how people like Elon think and
act. If you spend some time reading biographies of people like him, you really can't miss it.
And if you want to do that, and if you want a few recommendations, I really liked Ashley Vance's
biography of Elon Musk, Philip Freeman's biography of Alexander the Great, Ron Chernow's biography of John D.
Rockefeller, and Edmund Morris's biographies of Theodore Roosevelt.
And all of those people very much embodied this trait that I'm talking about.
All right, last takeaway, quote, the years have taught me one skill, how to be miserable.
I know how to shut up and keep humping.
Now, this one strikes at what I think is one of the
greatest single predictors of long-term success and achievement. And that is simply how much
distress and comfort can someone endure on a given path before giving up? Or if you want to
view it differently, how much does he or she value being comfortable? And simply put, the more effort and pain that someone is willing to push through, and the
more that he can resist the desire to just lie around and consume things that make him
feel good, the more likely he is to be able to make his dreams a reality.
I once saw a video where a guy talked about an ultra marathon that he did with his friends
where they all ran different legs of a 100 mile stretch. And there was a retired Navy SEAL in the marathon named David Goggins who did the entire thing on his own. Insane, 100 miles.
David's ankles were swollen to the size of grapefruits and he had broken several bones in his feet.
And the narrator of the video, the guy, he asked the Navy SEAL how the hell he did it and also asked if David would train him.
So later on, they met at a gym and David told him to do as many pull-ups as he could. So the guy did eight.
That's what he had the first time.
So David told him to go again and he did six. Again, David said, and the guy got about four, barely. David then said that they couldn't
leave the gym until the guy had done 100 more pull-ups. And of course, the guy thought it's
impossible, but David insisted. And so he did it rep by rep over the course of a couple hours.
and so he did it rep by rep over the course of a couple hours. After finishing that 100th rep,
David told him, whenever you think you're done and entirely ready to give out, you're only 40% of the way there. The moral of this story is simple. It's that you can push yourself a lot
further than you realize and you can endure far more hardship than you think. So don't sell yourself short.
You don't have to break yourself every day, but you can easily go well outside of your comfort
zones regularly without any real consequences. And furthermore, the more you do this, the more
your capacity to stretch yourself expands. And that allows you to accomplish more and more without
feeling like you're really exerting yourself or suffering any more than you were before.
Hey there, it is Mike again. I hope you enjoyed this episode and found it interesting and helpful.
And if you did, and don't mind doing me a favor and want to help me make this the most popular
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shoot me an email at mike at muscleforlife.com and share your thoughts on how you think it could be
better. I read everything myself and I'm always looking for constructive feedback,
so please do reach out.
All right, that's it.
Thanks again for listening to this episode,
and I hope to hear from you soon.
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