The Daily Stoic - The Best Time Is Now | 9 Peak Performance Tips from Top Performers
Episode Date: January 31, 2023Obviously, the best time to plant a tree is 20 years ago. The earlier you get started on something that takes time, the bigger and better the results will be. As Seneca once said about t...he days that pass us by, "They are gone never to return." And that's sad. But as the second half of that expression about trees goes, the next best time is now. Today. Now is an opportunity to start. This is what you deserve.Today, Ryan talks to some of the top performing athletes and coaches about the keys that they use to make the most of their days, and how you can apply their insights to your own life.Today is the last day to sign up for Session 2 of the Daily Stoic New Year New You Challenge!✉️ Sign up for the Daily Stoic email: https://dailystoic.com/dailyemail🏛 Check out the Daily Stoic Store for Stoic inspired products, signed books, and more, including the Premium Leather Edition of the Daily Stoic.📱 Follow us: Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, TikTok, FacebookSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Hi, I'm David Brown, the host of Wundery's podcast business wars.
And in our new season, Walmart must fight off target, the new discounter that's both savvy and fashion forward.
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on music or wherever you get your podcasts. Welcome to the Daily Stoic Podcast, where each day we read a passage of ancient wisdom
designed to help you in your everyday life.
On Tuesdays, we take a closer look at these stoic ideas, how we can apply them in our actual
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Thanks for listening, and I hope you enjoy.
The best time is now.
Obviously the best time to plan a trees 20 years ago. The earlier you get started on something that takes time, the bigger and better the results will be. It would have been better then,
of course, if you had tackled the changes you needed to make in your life in 2020 or 2021 or 2022.
January 1st, 2023, it's come and gone. That would have been a great time to get
started on new habits to make new changes. It was a new year, a chance for a new
you, a fresh moment, fresh calendar. But all those moments are gone, just as your
chance to plant that tree two decades ago is gone. Missed opportunities, they belonged to death,
as Senika once said about the days that pass us by. They are gone, never to return, and that's sad.
But as the second half of that expression about trees goes, the next best
time is now. Today, now, now is an opportunity to start. This is what you deserve, Mark
Sirrealis wrote. You could be good today, but instead you choose tomorrow. But no, don't
choose tomorrow. Choose to be good today. Adopt the mindset of the great Stephen Pressfield who writes
in his book, Put Your Ass Where Your Heart Wants To Be.
Here is my frame of mind as I sit down to work.
This is the day.
There is no other day.
This is the day.
Don't wait for the bus to come around next year.
Don't tell yourself you'll do it later.
This is the day.
Now is now.
Now is the best time to start being the person
you want to be, which is actually why we're relaunching
today.
It's your chance to day, the new year, new you challenge.
Typically, we do it in a live the first 21 days of the year,
but we've actually found that most people abandoned their
New Year's resolutions by the 21st of the year.
So maybe that's you.
Maybe you fell short.
Maybe you delayed. maybe you didn't
even get started, but now is the time we heard from a bunch of people. They came back from vacation
late, they procrastinated, they changed their minds. They asked if we could bring it back or give
them a second go at it. And that's what we're doing today is the day it starts today. It's your last chance to sign up now daily stoic.com slash challenge.
You'll see me in there.
I'm already riding on a lot of the changes I made from starting the challenge a little
earlier than you, but I'd love to see you in there.
Join us with this awesome new cohort in the daily stoke, new year, new you challenge.
It would have been better if you started the first of the year, but today's not too bad either.
You're not going to get better by doing things that are easy. I want to take the hard way.
That's when you really build that character. That's when you become resilient.
There's almost no elite performer. It doesn't also have some sort of physical practice.
Wherever I go, I'm always looking for the practices or habits that allow people to be
great at what they do.
Like I was saying, they almost always have a physical practice, like whether it's a meditation
practice or a weightlifting practice, whether it's stand-up paddle boarding or distance running,
there's some physical thing that they do
that they bring back to their work.
And that's what I want to share with you today.
Some secrets from top performers
that allows them to do what they do.
What we're capable of is way more than we think.
Why I'm in this sport and why I keep signing up for
these really, really long races is that I want to see what's possible.
Physically and mentally, what are we capable of? I call it my pain cave and I'm trying to make it bigger.
So I'm hoping that this ceiling or back of my cave can be made bigger if I just keep on going into it and trying to do something a little bit harder or
push a little farther than I've ever gone before. And I'm really visual so when it gets to be that
state, when I'm running, I'll actually picture the cave holding like a chisel and a hard hat and
just like getting to work on making it bigger. So you don't even think about it as you're exploring the cave.
You're expanding the cave, so it's more of a mine than a cave.
And you're trying to go further deep into the bedrock.
You know, in high school, 10 miles was like our long run,
and we would be knocked out for days after.
Then as, you know, you keep going in,
that distance, that number keeps growing,
and your ability to go deeper into the cave gets a little bit bigger.
I guess that's a tricky part of distance running, not to say that Usain Bolt is not also cerebral, but like in a nine second race,
you're not reaching into any file cabinets. It's like hitting a baseball, you're just like see it.
So much of what's happening is deeply in the subconscious, like in the muscle memory, whereas in a 42 hour race, that's a lot of time inside your head.
For sure, it can be both. And that's where like your brain and your thoughts become so
important in those many, many hours of thinking. If you're continually letting your thoughts
travel down a negative path,
it's going to feed back into like what your body is able to give you and how it goes out there.
If you keep telling yourself that you're awful and this problem that's happening is ruining your race
and you know you shouldn't make it to the finish line, the odds are getting smaller and smaller
as the hours pass that you're actually going to make it to that finish line.
Personally, I have never lacked the discipline aspect.
I remember my parents being like,
it's okay to let up, it's okay to not play by the rules.
While self-discipline is fantastic in so many regards,
and I think in a lot of ways,
it also can create kind of a very rigid box.
It's like that, I think the number one cause of injury
and athletes is overtraining like most people suffer
from a lack of discipline, but at the elite level,
it's the excess of discipline that can get you into trouble
and that's where moderation comes in.
I always say my coach is there to dial me back,
to prevent me from going and as opposed to like pushing you
and being like, come on, you need to get moving,
you need to run more.
Said he's like, no, maybe you should take some rest right now.
Maybe because I think for many high achievers,
also the idea of rest is something that is so like
antithetical to everything that we believe in.
I think that rest for an athlete is one of the hardest
things that we have to do.
I take a rest day every week and it was actually,
it's always my least favorite day
because for me that is harder than going out and running,
you know, 10 miles or something like that.
It's almost round upon to start something
and not finish it.
You're called a quitter.
So I think that misconception that quitting
makes you a failure or that quitting is bad
is something that prevents a lot of people
from finding what that true calling for them is.
I had Kate Fagan on the podcast who wrote this amazing book called What Makes Maddie Run about this collegiate runner who ended up committing suicide.
The tragedy the book I felt when I was reading it was this girl is super talented.
I think running division one cross country and she hates it like she hates the program.
She hates her life. She hates what it's doing to her body,
she's clearly depressed.
It's almost like the part of her
that was such a good athlete made it impossible
for her to be like, I don't have to keep doing this.
Maybe quitting is a problem for 90% of the population,
but for like elite performers,
quitting is really hard because part of what makes you great
is that you're not a quitter.
I relate a lot to that sentiment, especially in my powerlifting career
towards the end. My entire business that I've built was surrounding my powerlifting
career. Everything kind of surrounds and follows that journey into powerlifting
and what that means to me and I felt sort of that our responsibility to keep going
even though after two or three years I hated it. I didn't like going to the
gym, it felt like a chore, it felt like a it. I didn't like going to the gym.
It felt like a chore.
It felt like a job that I didn't want to do.
It's important to make the distinction.
Am I quitting or am I not doing this?
Because I have my big toenail,
it's bugging me a little bit.
Or is it something more serious that I really need to listen to my body about?
To me, confidence is not just, oh, I believe in myself.
Confidence to me is a knowledge of what one is capable of doing.
And that is different to me than just faith, which one might take without evidence, but
I've also seen the demonstrable evidence of what I'm capable of.
How does one go about cultivating this confident mind that you're talking about?
Three ways you can think about it.
I've got to start looking for memories from my past of quality effort, little tiny successes
here and there, and some indicators of progress.
I've got to start being somewhat more selective about how I think about my past, both long
term and short term in terms of yesterday, and maybe I need to be very selective in terms
of how I think about, basically, the last hour of my life. When I was in physical geography class,
just now, what did I do right in that class? I want to take that memory with me on the clock. They're down by five points.
They got a score touchdown and so Manny takes the snap in the fourth quarter, throws this beautiful
40-yard rainbow right into his receiver's hands. Despite the fact that that receiver was covered pretty darn well.
That play of the game set up the Giants winning touchdown. Two days later, Mannyng is on a nationally
syndicated radio show. Commentator says, do you ever think about the ramifications of failure at moments
like that? And very politely, Eli Manning says, no, that's exactly what you don't
do. You think about all the times you got it right. That's the feeling that you
keep. He was pretty good at doing that. The first real class of activities in
terms of cultivating confidence is to be very selective about bringing in
constructive memories from
your past.
The second class of activities is being really careful about the stories that you tell
yourself about yourself in the present.
What are the underlying stories that you tell yourself?
Oh, I'm good at this.
Oh, I'm not good at that.
Oh, I hate doing this.
Oh, I love doing that.
Understand, ladies and gentlemen, every one of those expressions is basically a belief
about yourself.
The kid who says, oh, I'm not good at math.
Okay, well, maybe up to this point, that could be true, but going forward from this moment,
as long as you maintain that belief, I'm not good at math.
That belief is now a causal factor in your future experience.
One of the things that we have to do is come to grips with the various
self-fulfilling prophecies that we're all laboring under. A third class of activities is, of course,
how do you think about yourself in the future? What are the still photos of various futures that your
imagination is feeding you? What are the video clips of various future scenarios that sophisticated
video production studio in your imagination is feeding
you. Why don't we become the director of those short movies? Of a whole bunch of scenarios
that filled us with a sense of energy and optimism and enthusiasm. Once we start working on our minds
and all three of those levels, we are developing, as I put it in the book, a mental bank account,
which leads to that sense of certainty that we want.
developing as I put it in the book, a mental bank account, which leads to that sense of certainty that we want.
So the other thing that Stokes talked about
intended to use boxing more as the analogy,
but I think they also use like lifting heavy things,
which is this idea that life throws obstacles
or difficulties at us just like in the boxing ring
or on the wrestling mat,
you're paired with a sparring partner.
And an epictetus says like,
you shouldn't bemoan the fact that it's hard.
You should say,
this is how you become world class.
Or he says, this is how you become
Olympic class material.
It's by having strong sparring partners.
So how do you think about maybe this injury
that you're going through,
or just the difficulties you've gone through as your career?
Has that made you a more resilient athlete?
Oh no, I totally think so.
It's kind of one of those things that like,
you're not gonna get better by doing things that are easy.
Like I want to take the hard way.
That's when you really build that character.
That's when you become resilient is going through tough times.
I dislocated my elbow on the world stage
and like a lot of people may think,
it would be really easy for me to just,
I've done seven times at the games,'s good but instead I'm so excited to get
back there because I know that I'm gonna be better than I ever was just kind of
taking those hard circumstances and flipping them into a positive to where I'm
gonna use this to make me the best athlete that I've ever been.
When you see the Jordan, the Tom Brady, you see a certain level of calmness too.
The way I put the word on it,
on everything we talk about, your focus, your present.
To me, being present is being extremely calm.
When you stay calm and you have a nice routine,
you don't have to go find success.
Success will come and find you.
It will land right on top of you.
I guess in acting, they call it trying to catch a feather. It's like, if you go chase it, it'll go away find you. It will land right on top of you. I guess in acting, they call it trying to catch a feather.
It's like, if you go chase it, it'll go away from you.
Yeah.
But if you just sit there still and let it come,
it'll come to you.
Well, that's why I think ego is so dangerous
because I would say ego is not calm and not confident.
Yes.
Right, ego is this like, people think it looks like confidence
and maybe it looks like confidence on the outside.
But inside, it's like fundamentally insecure,
it's sensitive to slights, you know, like a duck,
it's like sitting on the water, it looks calm,
but it's like, furiously paddling.
That's what ego is to me.
And so you push that ego away
and you actually get to a place of calmness and confidence
because you're like, I've done the work.
And I also know that if I don't calm down
and get control of myself,
I won't be able to access or use the training
and the skills that I have as
effectively. I was at Cal Berkeley when I played football and one of our defensive players came in
at halftime and this dude was yelling and screaming and going nuts. He went out there and played the
worst. Of course. Think about why do players talk trash. It's to make the other player angry. Yeah.
And then you know they're not going to be as good.
And then we do that to ourselves all the time, right?
Like, we know that anger and other people
distracts them, pisses them off, overwhelms them,
gets them into trouble.
But with me, my anger is good fuel.
And it's like, no, it's not.
It's not at all.
Keep the main thing, the main thing.
What does that mean?
And how do you guys actually apply that?
So number one would be if we all come in to help the Rams
improve at football.
What that leads to, what we're hoping is,
right, some version of a Jim Collins flywheel effect,
a snowball effect where we just keep rolling the snow
and the ball gets bigger and bigger and bigger.
In the entertainment business, the neat thing is what keeps professional sports rolling
is maybe the drama that takes place in between the gains.
Whether one person likes this color and the other person likes that color,
one person voted for this politician, the other.
That's not the main thing.
Is it like that the organization has the main thing of like get better at football?
And then does each subsequent person have their own main thing?
Everyone has a specific role.
They know that role, they understand that role.
And it can also help individuals determine way to make this
isn't a role that truly fulfills me.
So maybe I'd better go look somewhere else.
I had the mantra once used in that,
good is the enemy of great.
Like everything I do, every day, I have to be great.
I have to be worthy of that next moment.
When really my new one is perfection
is the enemy of good.
When you try too hard to have that moment every single day,
you actually rob yourself of that kind of synchronicity
that happens when it does all come together.
And when you have been like toiling and working and just focusing on that process and also adapting
to what's happening in the world, which might be yeah, having a few weeks where you feel off.
For me, I was just sick and had to take an extra week off the bike. Those things happen.
And it's not going to be perfect, but oftentimes in my career when I really
analyze what's happened in those kind of like big, amazing moments, there will often be a
few things that I look back on, like 2018 when I won the World Championship, actually hurt
my knee and June, and I took two weeks off. At that moment of winning Worlds, I said,
man, I'm so glad I hurt myself, I had this break, I ended the season so energized, but in the moment it felt like
my career was under. Having that kind of long view and trusting that process is so much easier said
than done, but it is really kind of the crux of making those moments possible.
Most highly talented people were talented at a young age. They had some preclivenity at a young
age. This is, I'm talking more about the sport world in business. And as a young age. They had some preclivenity at a young age. This is I'm talking more
about the sport world than business. And as a young
age, what most people do is that they're supposed to form
their identity. But if the identity is almost infused with
the thing that you do, then your identity is mapped to your
outcomes. You have this below the conscious surface that I
am what I do. And I think a big part of my work in high-performing environments
is to help people, this is like decouple who you are from what you do.
And it's so intertwined, that's why the Fight Flight Freeze mechanisms
are on full tilt for people prior to walking on stage,
or prior to getting on the mound.
Those true brain mechanisms that are responsible for survival are on point when
there's nothing of real threat, physical threat. The only thing on threat whether you're on the
mound or on the stage is other people's opinions. It's not that you don't identify with what you do,
but your identity is not just that. When you pull apart what you do from who you are, the work is to
say, well, who am I independent of what I do?
It's that part of you that's the same as when you're 30, that you're 3 or 13, you know, like,
who am I? And then the thing that I do ends up becoming the way I'm expressing my craft and
expressing my philosophy and expressing my psychology. There is a difference between the brain and the
mind. The brain is like the hardware in a computer and the mind is like the software that runs the hardware. It doesn't quite hold up when you really pull on the
science of it, but it is interesting to think about like, okay, you're born with some hardware.
But who trained? Who programmed your software?
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