Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - The Best of Muscle For Life: Easy Strength, Napping For Muscle Growth, & Truth About “Secrets”
Episode Date: June 16, 2023In this installment of the Best of Muscle For Life, you’ll hear hand-picked clips from three popular MFL episodes: an interview with Dan John on quick, efficient strength training workouts, a monolo...gue on whether taking naps can help you gain muscle and strength faster, and a motivational episode on doing the real work and developing skill over “hacks” and shortcuts. Some people—my favorite people—listen to most or even all of my podcasts, but my wizbang analytics tell me that while many listeners tune in on a regular basis, they don’t catch every installment of Muscle for Life and thus miss out on insights that could help them do at least a little better inside and outside the gym. That’s why I do “best of” episodes that contain a few of the most practical and compelling ideas, tips, and moments from the more popular episodes I’ve published over the years. This way, you can learn interesting insights that you might have otherwise missed and find new episodes of the show to listen to. So, in this installment of The Best of Muscle for Life, you’ll be hearing hand-picked morsels from three episodes: Dan John on “Easy Strength” For Quick, Efficient Workouts That Really Work (Originally published 8/11/2021) Can Naps Help You Gain Muscle and Strength Faster? (Originally published 9/10/2021) Motivation Monday: “Secrets” Don’t Work Unless You’ve Worked for Them (Originally published 3/26/2018) And we’ll be starting with number one, Dan John on “Easy Strength” For Quick, Efficient Workouts That Really Work. Timestamps: (0:00) - Please leave a review of the show wherever you listen to podcasts and make sure to subscribe! (3:26) - Dan John on “Easy Strength” For Quick, Efficient Workouts That Really Work (16:05) - My free meal planning tool: buylegion.com/mealplan (17:28) - Can Naps Help You Gain Muscle and Strength Faster? (25:39) - Motivation Monday: “Secrets” Don’t Work Unless You’ve Worked for Them Mentioned on the Show: Want a free meal planning tool that figures out your calories, macros, and micros, and allows you to create custom meal plans for cutting, lean gaining, and maintaining in under 5 minutes? Go to https://buylegion.com/mealplan and download the tool for free!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello and welcome to the latest and greatest episode of Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews
and thank you for joining me today. Now, I have recorded hundreds of episodes of Muscle for Life
and I've talked about a huge variety of things related to health, fitness, lifestyle, mindset,
ranging from the basics of diet and exercise like energy and macronutrient balance
and progressive overload and training frequency and volume to fads like the ketogenic and carnivore
diet and collagen protein to more unfamiliar territories like body weight set point and
fasted cardio. And some episodes resonate with my crowd more than others,
but all of them contain at least a few key takeaways that just about anyone can benefit
from. At least that's what I tell myself. That's what helps me sit down in the chair every day and
do this. And as cool as that is, it poses a problem for you, my dear listener, especially if you are new here. And that
is ain't nobody got time for that. We're talking about probably a thousand plus hours of content
at this point. And while some people actually do make the time to listen to most or even all of my
podcasts, my whizbang analytics tell me that while many listeners tune in on a regular
basis, they don't catch every installment of Muscle for Life and thus they miss out on insights
that could help them get even just a little bit better inside and outside the gym. Because if you
just get a little bit better consistently enough, that can add up to big results in the long run. And people
have also been telling me that they would like me to do more shorter multi-topic episodes like my
Q&As and Says You episodes. And so I got an idea. How about a best of series of podcasts that
contains a few of the most practical and compelling ideas, tips, and moments from my most popular episodes,
going all the way back to the beginning.
This way, people who are new in particular
can quickly determine if this is the droid
they're looking for, if this podcast is for them or not.
And then those who are regulars and enjoy what I'm doing,
but just don't have the time or inclination to listen to all of my stuff.
And I do understand that. I don't take it personally.
You can also then benefit from the discussions and the episodes that you are not listening to in full.
You can also find new episodes to listen to without having to give an hour of your time to determine whether it was worth it or not.
So in this installment of the Best of Muscle for Life,
you are going to be hearing hand-picked morsels from three episodes.
The first is an interview that I did with Dan John on easy strength for quick,
efficient workouts that really work.
That's the name of the episode.
And the second episode featured today
is a monologue that I recorded on NAPS. Can they help you gain muscle and strength faster? Which
is also the title. Can NAPS help you gain muscle and strength faster? And then finally, another
monologue called secrets don't work unless you've worked for them. So let's start with the highlight
reel from my interview with Dan John.
If I say I'm lifting weights to my grandson, Danny, he'll show me a double bicep.
If you talk to a team of basketball players, we're going to start doing more weight training.
They're going to start talking about how to look good on the beach.
This is all relatively new in our field.
The idea that you would go into just, you would practice getting stronger is the tradition.
So easy strength is, I always explain it like, it's like learning how to type. I got a keyboard here. And if I just grabbed your
finger and smashed it on A, A, A, A, A, A, A to failure, you wouldn't be a better typist.
Your left pinky would be exhausted. And so the traditional way of getting strong is the same
way you learned it to type, play the guitar. It's practiced over time. And then the nervous system adapts. And then after a while, those adaptions cause a stress in
the body because of the load is getting bigger. And then that beautiful phrase that Rob Wolf says,
and then the hormonal cascade happens. And that's when you develop hypertrophy and those other
qualities. I've been lifting weights since 1965. And if I've been blitzing and bombing since 1965, I don't know if I'd have a joint that still worked. And what
bothers me about these Instagram clowns and the crap you see, and thankfully magazines are
disappearing. Sadly, the internet took over, but it's this nonsense. That's why I love track and
field and swimming so much is you've got these two sports that you can see when anything you've
added works or doesn't work. And you can just see it. I mean, if the discus goes farther,
you jump higher, you run the hurdles faster, whatever we did, even if it's stupid worked.
And that my knock on hypertrophy work for athletes and even general population is that,
you know, the old phrase, and it's a bit sexist, but I still like it. It looks like Tarzan plays
like Jane. And that is, I think a real truism.uism. I'm still, I'm 64. I'm still the person people call when they want to move a couch. I'm
64 and I still win Highland games with the Opens. And it's because these guys, God bless them,
they're training like bodybuilders to do an explosive throwing sport. And it's just wrong.
So what is easy strength?
Well, easy strength is an idea obviously been around a long time.
And really, it's where it really boomed is that Charles Staley used to have a thing called the boot camp, and he invited speakers to come down.
Well, one year, his speaker canceled just a few days before.
Pavel Satsulin and I sat down after, and we're talking, and he said, how busy are you?
And I said, I'm working two full-time jobs.
At the time, I was an administrator and a college professor.
And two full-time jobs.
I got two daughters at home. balls are in the air. And he said, you know, for the next 40 days,
pick five lifts, never go to failure, never do more than 10 total reps. So that's three sets of
three, two sets of five is a standard. And by the way, this is a single workout. This cutting edge
workout is exactly what you'll get in this book here from 1962, the Sears barbell and dumbbell exercise
program from Ted Williams. It's funny how he told me the program is that, you know, I've heard this
before. It's the way people train when I was young. And I followed it to the absolute T. The
key is this. And for example, one of the exercises I picked was incline bench press. And so I started
off with two sets of five with 165, which is,. And I kept doing that until, like he said, it felt so light, it was silly. So I jumped to 185.
I jumped a week or so later, I'm at 205. A week or so later, I'm at 255, all two sets of five
with that exercise. And then one day by myself in my garage, and it's winter, December, so it's
freezing here in Utah. I benched 315 for a double, no spotter with a car at my feet that if I, a brand new car,
if I missed the lift. So my incline bench had been only 300, but I did 315 for a double.
So 15 pound jump in my PR for a double easily could have gotten more, but I racked because I
didn't want to do any damage to myself or the car. And then I thought to myself, when I put the bar
in, it's like, okay, this is 22 days. So basically we're looking at what week five-ish because I
lift five days a week. And I had added 15 pounds to a lift and I'm not some guy who just showed up,
you know, I'm pretty experienced lifter. I was an international level thrower at the time.
And I'm like, this is too good to be true. Many of the workouts, I did a workout one time on the
light day where I was boiling a pot of water for something for dinner. I put the pot of water on
when it came to a boil, the workout was over. Five exercises, that was a light day. So it was
just the one set of 10, just kind of a tonic workout. And I thought to myself, and then
that season I go out and I'm throwing the discus and I'm doing Highland games and people keep
coming up and going, hey man, what are you on? And I'm like, I'm on nothing. This is the workout
I'm doing. And I would tell them literally line by line, point by point on a napkin at a restaurant going to the exact numbers I'm using. And they're like, no,
really, what are you on? No, nothing. You're working out two hours a day in the weight room
and I'm working out 15 minutes and I'm throwing farther than you, you know, at least show some
intellectual integrity and think through what I just said. And they can't because of the same
problems. I guarantee the bulk of your listeners are going to have. The problem is if something
easier comes by and it makes you go, wait a sec, so I can do less and get more. It makes you very
angry and literally unable to almost hear. If I'm working with a discus thrower, easy strength
would come and go through the season appropriately. We might have a real focused Olympic lifting three weeks and then go
easy strength after that. In the off season with a thrower, you might be on a mass building program,
high rep squats and things like that. If I'm working with a general client, you probably tap
out on the easy strength. We say the 40 workouts, but honestly, I've discovered six to eight weeks
of it. You pick five exercises, you do a total of 10 reps, three sets of three, two sets of five,
whatever. At about two months, you've pretty much tapped out. Now, I think easy strength can
continue to get you stronger, but we're not dealing with machines. We're dealing with humans
and you got to change things up. And as far as the programming goes,
what does the frequency on these exercises look like?
So I have a two-week template.
You'd remember that from the book.
If you're doing five days a week, you'd have probably three of the workouts be two sets
of five, kind of just one, two, three, four, five.
Good.
One, two, three, four, five.
Next exercise.
One day a week, maybe a set of 10 light, 40, 35% of your max.
I mean, light, light, light, just greasing the groove.
Just as we know that acts well.
And the nervous system is still working on that one.
And then one day a week, like a 5-3-2, where you got to make that double, which is gently
heavier.
That would be great.
I have also had some good success with having now with the Olympic lifts.
I've been experimenting with this, where basically I have three lightish days a week.
But this is the Olympic lifts. The bar starts on the floor. It goes overhead. I stand
up, I drop it. You know, it's a, it's a whole body movement. So you might be able to get away
with more light and medium with a full body movement than you would with a pull-up, which
is, you know, pretty, the pull-up stroke is, that's not very long. The stroke or the, you know,
overhead press, those are pretty short strokes. Actually the workout I usually recommend for, for most people is a vertical press,
a military press, a vertical pull, generally pull up, chin up, neutral grip, pull up,
lat pull down if you have to. Okay. A deadlift. Maybe an assisted pull up if you need to.
That way. Yeah. If you need to share a deadlift variation. And usually I recommend either like
deadlift off the racks. So, you know, you don't have to worry about bringing the bar off the floor, the ab wheel,
and then like something like a farmer walk. That's like one of my favorite to goes.
And then if you want to lose fat, you go for the walk. It can be that easy. So, you know,
so the downside of missing big lifts is that a, they hurt you. This surgery is from a miss.
Both of those surgeries are from misses. In fact, I can probably go through all the surgeries I've had, and most of the time it was failed attempts. But at the
second level is we're trying to teach the nervous system to be as efficient as possible. And if you
miss, you're not teaching the nervous system. Well, what happens very quickly, like you say,
you can't see how you can get hypertrophy from it. But I remember one time, my friend,
John Price and I, we both benched 365 for
10 reps. And my thought process is for the gentle listener, it was only one set of 10, but you know,
I don't know about you, but if you bench 365 for 10, there's a chance your body is going to respond
somehow to that load. And so if you get a lot of weight, it's, you know, it's a lot of weight when
the bar bends when it touches your chest. Yeah. If you're, I's a lot of weight when the bar bends, when it touches your chest. Yeah.
If you're, I mean, if you're squatting 605, like my friend Bish used to do for 10, there's a good
chance your body's going to go, Hey, we better do some growing here because some happen out there.
So I think you can, by training the nervous system hard enough, getting the loads, reps and
sets appropriate, load appropriate, but over time you will get
the hormone response. And the key to that, the weights do need to get heavier though. So I get
people, people listening, they wonder, okay, so, all right, I get it. Make sure the weights are
light. Definitely not going to miss any sets, but how do I progressively overload? How do I
get stronger? How do I go from where I'm at to like, you know, ending this eight weeks
with heavier weights? Well, Mike, that's the hard
part. And when I first wrote the book, Easy Strength with Pavel, we had this great conversation.
When you're working with people who deadlift 300, and then you're working with people who
deadlift 600, these rules of 95% and 90 don't work. So that's where I came up in this very
important part of easy strength. So one of my best lifts of my life was at the national
championship. If I make the lift, at the national championship. If I make
the lift, I'm national champion. If I miss, I take fourth place. Well, I make the lift. Now,
here's the thing. Could I ever equal that lift? If someone says to me, well, okay, so your workout
today is 90% of that. Well, no, no, that was a one that was to win the nationals in Baton Rouge
under a ton of pressure, pulled it out of my rear end. It was a one-off lift.
So what you have to do with easy strength is you have to really figure out,
and the words I use are sort of max, max. Well, and the one I just said is a max, max, max,
an unrepeatable lift. The longer you're around people, the more you'll have a story with every
single attempt. Every single max I have has a story in it because you had to make a choice.
It was for a contest. You were trying to break a state record. There's always a story
to it. So one of the problems we have with easy strength is that conversation about what is easy,
what is light. People want percents, but when you deadlift, like if I'm working with a guy who
deadlifts 800, a 50% deadlift is four. Now the recovery inroad that an easy when you deadlift, like if I'm working with a guy who deadlifts 800, a 50% deadlift is
four. Now the recovery inroad that an easy 400 pound deadlift is, is still a huge inroad into
recovery abilities. So if you deadlift eight, your light day might be 225 and you go, wait,
that's ridiculous. That's not a percent. Yeah, I know. I know. So that's kind of where the,
this is where the art of easy strength comes in. You
might have some listeners here who want to try it and they're going to try to do 50%, but,
but their bench presses say 150 pounds and they put 75 in their mail. I don't get anything out
of it. Well, yeah, because there's light and there's reasonable, but you have to kind of
dial that in for yourself. So easy strength is not for somebody who doesn't
want to be tuned into their body, tuned into their training history. If you want to be told
exactly what to do, just go online and buy someone's program. But if you really want to
experiment with what your abilities can be, then easy strength is an option. So that's why I think
easy strength works with people who've been around the block a little bit, not because they know,
Easy Strength works with people who've been around the block a little bit, not because they know, well, they do.
They do know one thing.
They know what easy feels like.
That's the one gift they have.
But they've also slammed their face against that wall enough to know that I don't want
to slam my face into the wall much longer.
I was fortunate when I first did the program because all I had was 35s and 25s.
So those are my options.
And then I got a 45- pound plate. So you'll notice
my options went 165. That's a 35 plus 25, 185, 45 plus 25, 205, 45, 255. So it was nice. So for me,
I like the big, I don't want to see you adding tiny plates on the sides. I'd like to see big
jumps. Now, Pavel is really interesting about that. He believes there should only be two plates
in a gym, the 45 pound plates and the 25. And his idea on this is that it gets you,
if you're going to jump from 185 on the bench to 225, you're going to spend a lot more time at 185
practicing good technique and making things are clean before you jump, boom, to the two big plates.
By the way, when I talk like this sometimes, and this has got to be careful about this, Mike,
I did not tell anybody that that's what you have to do.
This is a intellectual discussion
about what would be a really good way
for most people to figure things out.
I like substantial jumps.
All right, that's it for the featured snippets
of the interview I did with Dan John.
If you liked what you heard
and you want to listen
to the entire episode, you can find it in August of 2021. So if you just go back to August 2021
and look for Dan John on easy strength for quick, efficient workouts that really work,
you can listen to the whole episode. All right, let's move on now to the featured moments from
can naps help you gain muscle and strength faster. But first, how would you like a free meal planning tool that figures out your calories,
your macros, even your micros, and then allows you to create 100% custom meal plans for cutting,
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Well, all you got to do is go to buylegion.com slash meal plan,
B-U-Y legion.com slash meal plan and download the tool. And if I may say this tool really is
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composition, if you are struggling to lose fat or gain muscle, the right meal plan can change everything.
Dieting can go from feeling like running in the sand in a sandstorm to riding a bike on
a breezy day down a hill.
So again, if you want my free meal planning tool, go to buylegion.com slash meal plan,
buylegion.com slash meal plan enter your email address and you will
get instant access all right so let's talk about naps can taking naps help you gain muscle and
strength faster can it help you perform better in your workouts can it help you lose fat faster
well what is certain is getting enough sleep can do all of those things research shows that the
right sleep
schedule can certainly improve your workout performance. It can improve your workout
recovery. It can help you gain muscle and strength faster. It can help you lose fat faster,
minimally by helping you control your appetite. And research shows that the minimum amount of
sleep required to reap all of those benefits for most people is between seven and nine hours every
night. However, studies show that extending that to 10 plus hours per night or per day, and this
will bring us into napping, can be even better. That said, many people find it hard to get seven
to nine hours of sleep each night, let alone 10 plus. Let's look at some research.
In a recent study conducted by scientists at Sfax University, the researchers wanted to
understand the effect of different nap times on cognitive and physical performance and subjective
ratings of muscle soreness, mood, fatigue, stress, and sleep quality. And so they took 20 physically
active male participants,
and they gave them the opportunity to nap for three different amounts of time, 25, 35, or 45 minutes. And then there was a control group who didn't take naps. And each nap time was
separated by 72 hours, during which time participants did not take naps. And then the
nap times were completed in a random order. And although the
participants were given ideal sleeping conditions to take their naps in, whether they actually slept
or how long or how well they slept wasn't measured, only the amount of time in bed. So what were the
results of this study? Well, the researchers found that the longer the participants were allowed to
nap, so up to 45 minutes, the better they performed
on various physical and mental tests and tasks, like a jump test, a digit cancellation task,
which helps measure things like focus and how fast you can process information, subjective ratings
of mood, and a questionnaire that was used to gauge stress, sleep quality, fatigue, and muscle soreness
on a scale from one to seven. So again, improvements across the board with the greatest improvements
seen in the 45-minute nap group, which to repeat myself was a nap opportunity. So not 45 minutes
of sleep, but just a 45-minute nap. And some people obviously slept more and some people slept less
during that 45-minute period, depending on how long it took them to fall asleep. And the same
thing goes for the other groups. There are several other studies that back these findings up as well.
I found four others, for example, that showed that naps improved physical and cognitive performance
and reduced levels of subjective
fatigue and stress. And while I did also find a couple of studies that showed no such effects,
the weight of the evidence based on my review of the research is that naps do improve physical
and mental performance and reduce fatigue and stress in many people. So let's now apply this to working out. Again,
let's look at it through the lens of body composition. So gaining muscle, losing fat,
and then also workout performance and what that means for gaining muscle and gaining strength.
So there's no evidence that naps are going to make you instantly stronger. So let's say you
work out at 4 p.m. You are probably not going to
perform immediately better in that workout if you slept enough the night before and took a nap at,
let's say, 12 or 1 p.m. But something you may immediately notice is if you take a nap,
the workout may feel less difficult. It may lower the perceived exertion, the perceived difficulty,
if you were to rate the amount of effort it's taking to do your workout. And that can help
improve performance because that can help you feel like you can work harder in your workout.
If you take a nap before you train, you may notice that your focus is higher, that you have
more attentional energy to give to your
workout, and that can positively influence your workout. And so that's another way that naps can
immediately enhance your training. And a final way is just lowering stress levels and lowering
fatigue levels, which is conducive to better workouts. It doesn't guarantee better workouts
depending on how you respond to stress and fatigue, but in most of us, it is going to help us get a little bit more out of our workouts.
every day, but just the days where you're going to be doing some heavy squatting or deadlifting or bench pressing or overhead pressing, maybe three days per week, for example. If you are now thinking
about doing this, I have a few tips for you. One is to avoid napping for too long because research
shows that if you nap for more than 45 minutes, and again, this means nap opportunity, not sleeping 45 minutes. But if
you get into bed with a timer of, let's say, 60 or 90 minutes, that is going to increase the chances
that you fall into deep sleep. And the more deep sleep you get during the day, the harder it is
going to be to sleep at night. And you don't want to rob Peter to pay Paul. You don't want to
take longer, more restful naps in the day that then make it harder to sleep at night. The primary
focus should be getting plenty of high quality sleep at night and then supplementing that with
a little bit of napping. So set that timer for 30 or 45 minutes. And again, the study I mentioned earlier showed
that 45 minutes was generally better than 30 minutes. Another tip is to not nap after 3 p.m.
because if you take a nap later in the afternoon or even the beginning of the evening, it can make
it more difficult to sleep at night. So the best time to nap is right around lunchtime, 12 or 1 p.m.
Also, don't nap right before you are going to do a workout or a cognitively demanding task. Don't go
from getting out of bed right into your workout or your deep work session because research shows
that even 30-minute naps often require a period of time afterward for our body and our brain to
wake up and be ready for a high level of exertion, whether it's physical exertion or cognitive
exertion. And also, if you are having trouble getting into the habit of napping, it can help
to avoid caffeine or at least have your caffeine earlier in the morning. Give yourself at least four, five, six hours
in between the first dose of caffeine and your nap.
Make sure that your room is dark and quiet and cold.
Those are your baseline conditions
that are conducive to good sleep.
It also can help to find ways to reduce stress levels
before you attempt to nap.
So you could take a hot bath. It doesn't have to
be long. I know that even though many of us now are working at home and we've saved time that we
normally would waste commuting and commiserating around the water cooler, we don't necessarily
have the time to, let's say, take a 45-minute nap with a 45-minute preparatory routine, but a short, maybe five or 10 minute hot bath or a
little bit of reading or a little bit of listening to calming music or breathing techniques can help
you relax and then actually get to sleep. All right, that's it for clips from can naps help
you gain muscle and strength faster. And if you want to listen to that episode, it was published in September of 2021. So you can go back and find it. And let's move on now
to the third and final episode featured in this episode. Secrets don't work unless you've worked
for them. Now, you have a lot of people out there that want to do a lot of things. You know, a lot of people who want to lose that belly fat. They want to pick those winning stocks or they want to pick up
those winning dates. And many of those people are frantically searching for one thing. They're
searching for secrets, hacks, shortcuts, ways to get more for less. And while there's nothing wrong with trying to be
efficient in your work and trying to get the most output from the least amount of input, in fact,
that's something you should strive for, I think, in all areas of your life. It is a mistake to look
at people that can do things that we can't or that have things that we don't like
they're magicians, like they possess some sort of arcane wisdom and that's what has allowed them to
rise above the rest. Don't be fooled by the well-groomed image that many of these people
present to the world. These people are not dandy, dainty show horses. These
people are stubborn plow horses. These people have spent more time just working their fields than
any rational person would. These people know every bump, stump, and hump by name. The yokes are almost form-fitted to these people's leathery
necks. If an activity is even remotely complex, there are just so many techniques and methods and
skills and variables, and some are easily teachable and some are not. And the only way to make sense of all of those secrets, all of those parts, is to spend a lot of time in very deliberate, mindful practice.
The real secret to really standing out in any way, whether it's your work or your body or some other area of your life, is skill. And the only way to get skill is to stop looking for the special robes and crystal
balls and incantations and just put on your overalls and grab one of those hammers that
are lying around and get to work. Because the truth is, if you don't want to work for them,
then secrets will never work for you. Dollars to donuts, you can take that one to
the bank. I believe it's almost axiomatic. So you can read books, you can read blogs, you can get
tips that may supply pieces to the puzzle, but in the end, you're going to have to roll up your
sleeves and you are going to have to figure out how everything fits together. The most straightforward path
toward a great anything is almost always straight through pain. Straight into pain and straight
through pain. The most reliable route to efficiency is looking for the aspects of whatever we're
talking about that are toughest and usually least enjoyable, that produce the
least amount of instant gratification. I look immediately for those things because more often
than not, those are the things that if done well enough and consistently enough produce outstanding
results. Most people that say they want to become a better writer are not going to be willing to
spend, let's say on average, 45 to 60
minutes a day reading and reading things that are challenging, reading things that are difficult,
that make you think, that challenge your vocabulary and force you to learn new words,
and then spend a considerable amount of time writing every day, whether they feel like it or
not, whether they feel inspired or not, sit down, do the work, put in the hard time learning new
words by using the dictionary.
So that's an area of my work where I've really tried to take a first principles approach and
where I've really looked for the uncomfortable stuff that most people don't want to do and that
I think will provide the most benefit. And usually those things are correlated. In fact, I bet you it
would be productive if
before you got into anything, you went and interviewed 20 people that have spent some time
doing it and have gotten maybe okay. And you ask them, what are the top three things that you are
not doing right now that you probably should be doing if you really wanted to get as good as you
can at whatever this thing is.
If you ask that question to enough people, I bet you, you could probably just start there.
Look for the common nominators of those surveys and just start there.
And you'd make a lot faster progress than most people.
Now, if everything that I've been talking about is discouraging to you,
I think that you are looking at it wrong.
Hunting for secrets is discouraging to you, I think that you are looking at it wrong. Hunting for secrets is
discouraging. Stumbling around in the dark, anxiously turning over rocks in search of
arcana is discouraging because a part of us, the intuitive part, knows that we are trying to
catch wind with a net when we do this. On the other hand, donning the yoke can be incredibly encouraging
because while yes, it is bulky and uncomfortable at first, there is a lot of solace to be had in
knowing that no matter how tough the experience is going to be or how unenjoyable or unfun the
experience is going to be, it will transform you for the better. So you want to lose weight, you want to build
muscle, you want to make more money, you want to learn something new, whatever you want to do,
just don't be one of the suckers who is groping around for secrets. Just find the field,
throw on the yoke and get pulling. And eventually the quote unquote magic will happen. And then everyone will marvel at your overnight success
and at how lucky you got. Because of course they don't understand the process. That is their
worldview. They themselves are trying to get lucky. They themselves are chasing overnight success and
simply don't realize that it's a myth. And that's it for some of my favorite snippets
from Secrets Don't Work Unless You've Worked For Them.
And if you want to listen to that whole episode,
it was published in March of 2018.
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