Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - How to Use Scientific Thinking to Be More Right
Episode Date: April 26, 2021This episode is a bit of an anomaly. It’s about applying scientific thinking to our lives and being willing to revise our ideas, beliefs, and actions, and learning one of the most important meta-ski...lls: the ability to change our minds and be willing to admit we were wrong. I think that our ability to accomplish our goals and intentions in any area of our life depends in a very large part on this ability. People who aren’t good at changing their minds, who are very stubborn, very defensive, and who refuse to say sorry, rarely make it. Life runs roughshod over those people and I don't know anyone like that who is successful or doing well in life. I don't just mean financially, either. Sure, that's one component of success, but there are other things that matter like physical and mental health, and the quality of relationships with family, friends, and coworkers. On the flip side, some of the most successful people I know share quite a few traits, and one that’s always stood out is that they don't have a problem saying that they were wrong. They don't have a problem changing their mind when presented with good enough information. In fact, they actively seek out that information. They read books, listen to podcasts, interviews, and lectures. They don't just seek out information that confirms the things that they think are correct, either. They’re willing to hear counterpoints and they’re willing to entertain other ideas. That is, they're willing to go through that process of approaching the ultimate truth, but they also understand that it’s impossible to achieve absolute certainty of most things that matter in life. They’re just too complex, and there are too many shadings of truth. These people don't fall into the mental trap of thinking they have everything worked out, though. They continue evolving their understanding of the world and their interactions with it. So, that's a little foretaste of today's episode. If I’ve piqued your interest, I think you're going to like the rest of it, so take a listen and let me know what you think! Mentioned on The Show: Shop Legion Supplements Here: https://buylegion.com/mike Want free workout and meal plans? Download my science-based diet and training templates for men and women: https://legionathletics.com/text-sign-up/
Transcript
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Greetings, friend. I'm Mike Matthews. This is Muscle for Life. Thank you for joining me today.
And this episode is a little bit of an anomaly. It is not the normal type of content that I post,
but I thought it was interesting enough. I thought enough of you might find it interesting
to warrant being its own episode because it actually started as me recording an introduction to what was
supposed to be about vitamin and mineral deficiencies, correcting the five most common
vitamin and mineral deficiencies. And it turned into a tangent on scientific thinking, applying
the scientific method to our lives and being willing to revise our ideas and our beliefs and our actions and learning a very important, I would say one of the most important, if not the most a meta skill is, and that is the ability to change our minds, to be willing to
admit we were wrong, or as I explain in this episode, to first be willing to view these
experiences as opportunities to be more right. And so as I explain in this episode, I really do think
my current position, which I am willing to change, but I really do think that our
ability to accomplish our goals, to accomplish our intentions in any area of our life depends
in a very large part on this ability. That people who are not good at changing their minds, who are
very stubborn, very defensive, who refuse to say sorry, for example,
or to say, oh yeah, I was wrong,
or to say, oh yeah, I once believed that was true,
but now I think of it a bit differently.
Those people rarely make it.
Life runs roughshod over those people.
I don't know anyone, for example, like that,
who I would say is successful in life, who is doing well in life, at least by my standards.
And I don't just mean financially.
Yeah, that's one component, of course, and that is an important component.
But there are other things that matter a lot, like their personal health, mental and physical.
The quality of their relationships, their familiar relationships, their friendships,
their relationships with coworkers and colleagues and people in the groups that they participate in
and their impact in those groups and so forth. And on the flip side, some of the most successful
people I know, some of the people who I could say I would love to achieve their level of living. Well, they share quite a few
traits. There are quite a few common denominators, but one that has always stood out to me is this
point. They don't have a problem saying that they were wrong. They don't have a problem
changing their mind when presented with good enough information. And all of them,
all of the people I'm thinking of, actively seek out that information. They read books,
they listen to podcasts and interviews and lectures, and they don't just do that to reinforce
their biases. They don't just seek out information that confirms the things that they think are correct.
They are willing to hear counterpoints and they are willing to entertain other ideas.
Maybe they don't accept a lot of the other ideas that they hear, but they're willing
to go through that process of approaching the ultimate truth, approaching the ultimate certainty in whatever endeavor or
discipline or area of life that we're talking about. And they also understand that it is
impossible to achieve absolute certainty, to grasp the absolute truth of most things that
matter in life. They are just too complex. There are too many shadings of truth.
And so they don't fall into the mental trap of thinking that they have most things mostly worked
out and there's no real need to continue evolving their understanding of the world and their
interactions with it. And so that's a little foretaste of today's episode.
If you're still listening and I have piqued your interest, I think you're going to like the rest
of it. Also, if you like what I am doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out
my sports nutrition company, Legion, which thanks to the support of many people like you is the
leading brand of all natural sports supplements in the
world. And we're on top because every ingredient and dose in every product is backed by peer
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which may not be as dangerous as some people would have you believe,
but there is good evidence to suggest that having many servings of artificial sweeteners in particular
every day for long periods of time may not be the best for your health.
So while you don't need pills, powders, and potions to get into
great shape, and frankly, most of them are virtually useless, there are natural ingredients
that can help you lose fat, build muscle, and get healthy faster, and you will find the best of them
in Legion's products. To check out everything we have to offer, including protein powders and bars,
pre-workout
and post-workout supplements, fat burners, multivitamins, joint support, and more, head
over to buylegion.com slash Mike.
That's B-U-Y-L-E-G-I-O-N dot com slash Mike.
And just to show you how much I appreciate my podcast, peeps, use the coupon code MFL
at checkout and you will save 20% on your entire first order.
So just keep that bit of information in mind when you hear any advice relating to how to eat,
how to train, how to supplement that appeals to science, that appeals to some authority.
It's not necessarily wrong and it shouldn't necessarily be automatically viewed with skepticism, but just understand that science doesn't prove what is true. Just because the current weight of the
scientific evidence indicates that something is probably true doesn't mean that it is necessarily
true or true in the exact way that we currently understand it. Science is a method of investigating truth and coming closer to truth, and it is always
evolving. So practically speaking, it makes sense to try to align as much of your eating and training
and supplementation with the current weight of the evidence as you can, assuming you can come
to a good understanding of that weight of the evidence through your own research or through someone
you trust who digests the information for you and shares it like I try to do, you know, here on my
podcast and in my books and articles and so forth. But don't allow any of that to become dogma. Be
willing to change your positions and change your actions as the evidence changes, as research advances and we get closer to the truth.
And that's something that I consciously am always working on myself because I have a
responsibility to do that because I am sharing information with a lot of people. And that,
for example, is why I have updated my flagship books for men and women, Bigger, Leaner,
Stronger and Thinner, Leaner, Stronger, and Thinner,
Leaner, Stronger, many times over the years. I've done three official editions now, but I've done
also kind of in the middle editions, a round of updates that didn't warrant a new edition in
between. For example, the second and third edition, I did probably three or four rounds of updates,
little things here and there just to clarify things based on reader feedback and questions, or to update information as my
understanding evolved, just to make it more accurate and more useful. And I am now working
on another round of updates, which probably could qualify as a fourth edition, but I'm just going to update the existing third edition.
None of the fundamental principles in the programs are going to change, but I think I can do a better
job presenting the information now than I did in the third edition, which came out a couple of
years ago. There are enough things on my list that I think
I can improve. Also, I think I can take some information out and then put other information
in that will be more useful. And so my list of things got long enough to where my conscience
compelled me to want to do another round of upgrades and updates. It's boring work. It's mostly just editing, which is not as fun as
creating new material, but I will be very happy when it's done because I'll know that every reader
from there on out is going to have an even better experience than readers are currently having.
Anyway, one other point that just pops into my head about the
process of changing your mind, basically of revising your positions and revising your actions
as new information becomes available to you. And particularly being open to that and not being
stubbornly resistant to information that doesn't fit your current positions and current actions,
something that has always helped me work to overcome my biases really is what we're talking about, right? Is to see that process as becoming more right, not as being wrong. Oh, I changed my
mind on something. I was wrong. Yeah, factually, I may have been wrong. Objectively speaking,
that may have been true, but I can also look at it the other way around and see it as becoming
more right. And I can also consider the conditions under which I previously came to the conclusion
or decided to behave in that way and look if I made a good decision given the information that
I had. And if I did, I can also acknowledge that, that I did do a good job assessing the information
or the circumstances and coming to a conclusion and acting on that conclusion. Even if I now know
that the information or the circumstances are otherwise,
that I was missing information or I was missing details in the circumstances or I misinterpreted
information or misinterpreted circumstances. And if I look back and conclude that I did not do a
good job processing the information or the circumstances, then I can look for a lesson.
I can try to learn
something from that experience so I can make better decisions in the future and not make the
same mistakes. I don't mind making mistakes so long as I can learn from them and not repeat them.
And that ability to not just think critically, but be willing to allow yourself to be more right. I could say be willing to be
wrong, but those words make many people very defensive. So we can look at it the other way,
the process of allowing yourself to be more right and to not become ossified in your ideas and
behaviors, to resist the urge to retreat to a bunker mentality, that ability is a
key meta skill in life, meaning a higher order skill that allows you to develop other skills
and allows other positive things to happen. In fact, I would go as far as saying a lot of our
ability to accomplish our goals in any area of our life, to build the
body we want, to build the business or the career that we want, to build the relationships that we
want, to build maybe the social impact that we want, depends on this meta skill. It depends on
a couple of others as well, like critical thinking and communication. But this
point in particular of not having to obsessively hold on to our ideas and our beliefs and our
behaviors is one of the top three, if not the top meta skill that is going to determine the overall tenor of our lives. Because no matter how clever or
perceptive we are, it is difficult to get things a lot more right than wrong initially. Anybody who
has done a lot of marketing work knows this, that you have to be willing to run a lot of marketing
experiments and you have to be willing for most of them to fail. No matter how
great they looked on paper, no matter how aligned they were with best practices or research, there
is no guarantee that they will work out. And I've experienced that many, many times. It doesn't
bother me anymore. It used to bother me a little bit because I was prone to overconfidence because I figured that I did a good job informing myself
and thinking about what we're going to do and coming up with a plan and executing on the plan
only to have it flop. And sometimes I also didn't even know why it didn't work as well as I thought
it would work. A good example of that is when we upgraded Legion's
checkout flow, which previously was objectively bad. By checkout best practices, bad. We basically
checked none of the boxes that you want to check. Previously, the checkout was ugly and it was
unconventionally laid out. So it was a little bit confusing and there were too many steps.
So it just required more work than it should have required to check out. And so we went from that
to a very streamlined checkout. Our current checkout now is very much in line with best
practices, very similar to Shopify, for example. It's clean, it flows. It is, I think, currently a two-step checkout,
and we're actually going to a one-step. We're going to test a one-step to make it even easier
to checkout. And I thought with a high level of certainty that that new checkout would outperform
the old one significantly. It wasn't going to increase checkout percentage or decrease abandon rates by 30, 40, 50%. I believe our
checkout percentage at the time was already high 60s anyway, which is good, quite good actually by
anyone's standards. However, I did think that we could get maybe a 10 to 20% lift and a couple of
smart digital marketer friends of mine, like Neil Patel, for example,
if you're familiar with Neil Patel Digital, very smart marketer, very smart business person,
a lot of experience. He also thought, yeah, 10% to 20% would make sense to him.
So we roll out the new checkout, which of course required a bit of time and a bit of money. It
required my designers and my dev team to work on it for, I believe it was like a three or four
week project. And they were doing some other stuff in for, I believe it was like a three or four week project.
And they were doing some other stuff in that time as well. It wasn't three or four weeks full time
on that, but that was their priority for three or four weeks. We roll it out and there was no
appreciable difference. If it is making a difference, it is too little to see in the data. It may, for example, have increased checkout rates by three,
four, maybe 5% absolute numbers, not relative. And we wouldn't see that in the data because that
would just take a sample size way bigger than is even worth pursuing. I mean, at this point,
we just stuck with it because we know it is better than the older one. And some people will probably appreciate that.
And there was a time when an experience like that would annoy me a little bit.
I would feel a little bit disappointed because how can such a sure thing fail to materialize?
But now I skip over that reaction.
I just go straight to, well, what can we learn from this experience? And in this
case, what we can learn is that, well, with our old checkout, our checkout rate was actually quite
good. And it is very hard to get above 70%, period, no matter what you're selling. In e-commerce,
it is basically impossible, as far as I know, to 80%, for example. Like if you're in the high 60s to low 70s or mid 70s in your checkout rates, you are
doing very well.
And so you were basically already there previously.
And so the lesson I took away from that experience, the hypothesis that I updated, I had a hypothesis
previously, and now I know that I am more right in that I updated that hypothesis to what I think
is reasonable. And that is that previously with the old checkout, people who were deciding to
purchase, people who were entering the checkout flow with the intention of checking out, of buying
whatever it is they want to buy, were willing to suffer through my kind of janky checkout, that it
didn't create enough friction to cause a major drop-off.
And so then, if that hypothesis is true, or if it is at least closer to the truth than
my old hypothesis, then, of course, updating the checkout and making it a lot better isn't
going to make a big difference in the numbers. It's not going to make a big difference quantitatively. But I also think, this is part of
my current hypothesis, that it is making a qualitative difference. The quality of the
checkout experience is now better. And I think many people are appreciating that more than the
old checkout. That if they were to rank their experience
checking out on a scale of one to 10, that previously it was maybe a five and now maybe
it's a seven or an eight. And that does matter. And particularly with first time buyers, because
the first impression that you make is so important in business. I mean, the very first impression when somebody
lands on your website, I mean, research shows that people are very quick to judge a business
based on what they see on the website. And if they conclude that they don't like the website,
then they are a lot less likely to buy. And it also can impact their experience of the product
and service. If people are buying something
despite a bad first impression, let's say an ugly website and an annoying checkout process,
they are more likely to dislike the product. And on the flip side then, if you can make a really
good first impression, if they can land on the website and it looks clean and it looks nice and
it looks professional, and then they can have a nice, easy checkout experience, they are more likely to like the product. And that's one of the reasons why I'm
super picky about every touchpoint we have with prospects and customers, with every element of
the website design, and the user experience, and the email follow-ups and the customer service experience. I'm always looking for ways to make
a better first impression, to reduce friction, to better serve the needs of my prospective buyers
and my customers. If you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere, definitely check out my sports
nutrition company, Legion, which thanks to the support of many people like you is the leading
brand of all natural sports supplements in the world. That mindset wouldn't be possible though.
It wouldn't be actionable without the ability to allow myself to continue to be more right. If I were much more
fixed in my ideas and opinions and ways, there are a lot of things that I wouldn't even be willing
to test or try out because those things would be settled to me. Maybe I would even go as far as
associating them with some element of my identity, right? Maybe I would associate my
marketing ideas with my general intelligence. And so then I would feel personally offended.
I would feel personally attacked if someone were to tell me, hey, you're doing it this way. You
should probably try doing it this way because it's probably going to be better. And so again,
I have consciously worked on this enough to get to a point where I can easily just say I was wrong and I can say it without any compunction
and I can be happy to find areas where I'm wrong because that allows me now to become more right.
And a little exercise that you can do, you could add it to your morning routine, for example,
that can help you cultivate this skill and cultivate this mindset is to look at all of the different ways that you
are right. Come up with specific examples where you were right, where you did do a good job
analyzing the situation, coming to a conclusion and acting, and then getting the results that you wanted and that you predicted.
And just remember times where you were right. And you'll realize that you are probably more
right than wrong a lot of the time. And so once you realize that, it becomes a lot easier to
accept instances of being wrong and to see them, to interpret those experiences as opportunities
to be more right. And that's also a good criterion for deciding which people you are going to allow
into your inner circle in your life. If you become closely associated with someone who is very fixed in their ways and who generally refuses to be wrong about anything,
you are inviting a lot of trouble because such people are extremely difficult to deal with,
to live with. And even worse, if you spend enough time around a person like that, you are going to
become more like that. You will not be able to consciously resist
that change. The old cliche of you are the average of the five people you spend the most time around
is a cliche for a reason. It is true. It is something that has been known anecdotally for
a long time. A lot of people have known it intuitively. They've experienced it firsthand.
They've seen it in others. But at this point, we can also say it's backed by science.
There is good research on that phenomenon.
It is real.
And it would be extremely arrogant for anyone, including me, to think that that doesn't apply
to them, that most people are affected that way.
But I am not because I am special.
I am an outlier.
Everyone's an outlier, right? That's the curse of magical thinking, which also includes completely neglecting the probabilities of
situations or thinking that while a plan objectively has very little chance of working out,
it's me. So of course it's going to work out. And if it doesn't work out,
of course it wasn't my fault. I wasn't wrong. I'll just find somebody or something to blame.
And that way I can remain ensconced in my delusions and they may objectively ruin my life,
but at least I never have to say I was wrong. At least I can tell myself all the way
to the bitter end, I was right. At least I can say to quote Frank Sinatra, I did it my way. And so,
hey, if that's how someone wants to live, bless their cotton socks. It's going to be a rough ride,
but maybe they like it rough, you know.
The rest of us, though, let's try to do better, as the obnoxious blue check marks like to say.
Which is actually an ironic comment for me to say, because I finally got my blue check mark on Instagram.
Oh, I feel so validated.
But, you know, we're all allowed at least small hypocrisies now and then, right?
And so anyway, I think I will abruptly stop talking at this point.
Ironically, this episode was supposed to be on the topic of fixing the five most common
vitamin and mineral deficiencies.
And then I started rambling on this tangent that turned into this entire episode and figured,
I guess I'll release this as its own episode.
It doesn't really make sense at this point to release a 20-minute intro to then segue
into vitamin and mineral deficiencies.
So I will follow up and I will definitely record a monologue on correcting vitamin and mineral deficiencies.
I'll shuffle my schedule around and I will publish it a week from today. I will publish it
next Monday. And well, now that I'm talking about schedule, I have some more things coming for you
this week. I have an interview coming with my buddy Chase Tuning, where he talks about some of the interesting lessons he learned
during lockdown. And I have a book club episode coming, which I think I will have done in time.
I may not, so I may need to bump that to the following week, but I will definitely have a
Q&A coming on Friday, where I'm going to be talking about vegan meat alternatives,
gaining strength, but not size,
and fitness for shift workers.
All right, well, that's it for this episode.
I hope you enjoyed it and found it interesting and helpful.
And if you did and you don't mind doing me a favor, please do leave a quick review on iTunes or wherever you're listening to me from in whichever app
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at muscleforlife.com, just muscle, F-O-R, life.comcom and share your thoughts on how I can do this better. I read
everything myself and I'm always looking for constructive feedback, even if it is criticism.
I'm open to it. And of course, you can email me if you have positive feedback as well,
or if you have questions really relating to anything that you think I could help you with,
definitely send me an email. That is the
best way to get ahold of me, mikeatmuscleforlife.com. And that's it. Thanks again for listening to this
episode. And I hope to hear from you soon.