Yesterday, we talked about how people like to focus on the wrong things to find
To view this email as a web page, [click here]() [IWT Header] {NAME}, Yesterday, we talked about how people like to focus on the wrong things to find success (morning routines, diet, etc). Today, I want to take a look at some real systems to help get you there. People who are the âbestâ at what they do werenât always like that. Yes, there was a time when Steph Curry couldnât shoot a free throw, and when I didnât know how to iron shirts perfectly. [How To Iron Your Clothes]() The reason they become masters of their craft is the invisible habits they use â often unconsciously. These habits are what end up separating them from everyone else. The habits are âinvisibleâ because: - They have been doing it so long theyâre unaware theyâre doing them. Or - They donât want to share them because of how people will react. Theyâre not sexy. Itâs just the unglamorous habits theyâve built into their lives to make them successful. Some examples Iâve found: [Unglamorous habits] Notice anything about these examples? Thereâs no magic bullet. Itâs just finding the habits that work, and grinding until they get the results they want. This is just one layer of mastery, and the more you understand each layer, the more youâll discover how much potential you really have. I thought itâd be fun to share 20 micro-lessons Iâve learned along the way, including from my business and personal life. Each of these micro-mastery lessons is a "shortcutâ if you look beneath the surface. - Wage war against complexity. Think about how much weâre pushed to get more and more complicated solutions: $500 baby strollers, incredibly complex diets, and 300 apps on our phone. Yet if weâre honest, how many of those actually changed our lives or made us happier? Itâs not enough to say âI like simplicity.â You have to actively fight for it. Make a list of things you wonât worry about. Restructure your spending and calendar to go to things that matter. In the modern world, complexity is the default. Fight for simplicity. - Timing matters. As famed chef David Chang points out, you have a âperfect windowâ of about 20 seconds to eat sushi. He doesnât wait for the chef to explain the food to him â he grabs it and eats it first. Timing matters. When youâre excited about something, do it right then! - Share the spotlight. Notice the difference between beginners and true masters: Beginners say, âI, I, Iâ â I did this, I think that, Iâm stuck. Masters say "we" and lavish praise on their teams. (If you donât think you have a team, look around you. We all have a team.) - The very best are usually great at many things. I remember a Stanford professor joking about how another professor â a Nobel Prize winner in chemistry â was also amazing at literature. This is hard to believe since the media popularized the concept that if youâre really good at one thing, youâre bad at others. (âOh, sheâs a successful entrepreneur ⦠she must not spend much time with her kids.â) The reality is, the very best are usually great at many things because they translate mastery from one category to another. You will only believe this when you meet someone whoâs great at multiple things. Itâs life changing. - Money and mastery. Mastery doesnât always mean getting the best grades, or the most money, or the most attention. But those are usually predictable byproducts of mastery. - Flip time on its head. At IWT, sometimes we say âGo slow to go fast.â Other times we take something that might take 2 weeks, and finish it in 2 hours. (This email to you is an example, {NAME} â it could have taken us 3 days. We did it in 45 minutes.) - The very best ask lots of questions. 3 questions I almost never hear: (1) âJust a second. If you donât mind me asking, how did you get to that?â (2) âIâm not sure I understand the conclusion â can you walk me through that?â (3) âHow did you see that answer?â Ask these questions and stop worrying about being embarrassed. How else are you going to learn? - Endings are important. They're the last taste, sound, impression that people will leave with. I read a great article on being intentional about the last day of your vacation â the day where most people donât plan anything. Plan something big, memorable, amazing. Flip the last day on its head. Be intentional about endings. - Action over consumption. Iâd rather act on 1 book than read 10. How much do you consume vs. produce? You donât learn to dance by sitting at the bar analyzing people's moves â you actually have to get up and give it a try. - For advanced readers, part 1: The more advanced you get, the more you have to fight to maintain a beginner's mind. I watch trainers telling their new clients to âengage their core,â a term the trainer has been using for 15 years. The first-time client has no idea what those words mean. Fight for the beginnerâs mind. - For advanced readers, part 2: At a certain point, youâll outgrow the people you used to learn from. Finding your next level of teachers will be critical. This uncomfortable step is where lots of people falter. - Choose your inputs wisely. The food you eat directly affects your energy, your focus, and your performance. What about the information you consume? What do you watch and listen to? If you could wave a magic wand and consume the âbestâ information, what would you choose? - When you feel like procrastinating: Sometimes itâs best to just skip it today ⦠or forever. - It's OK to be weird. If youâre reading this, you know youâre a little weird. Youâre on an email list, reading long emails about mental mastery, personal finance, business, and psychology. Who else does that? Youâre in good company. - Say âyesâ more often. Take building a social life by going to parties. Some people will ask, âWhoâs going to be there? What are we doing? I donât want to go unless itâs going to be fun.â I try to say yes to as much as possible, knowing that some will be lame but others will be amazing. - But also say ânoâ more often. Consider the opposite approach of âdefault no + intentionality.â By default, say no â but be extremely intentional about the things you say yes to: Go all in, spend time and money, and truly scrape all the meat off the bone. - Get comfortable with contradiction. A lot of people will be irritated that the last 2 principles contradict each other. Get used to it. The most interesting advice is full of contradictions. - Plan for failure. Some days you'll be distracted. Some team members will leave. Some days you'll be sick. That's life. The best figure out how to win when life throws a curveball â because it will happen. - Celebrate, even something small. I should have done this more in my early days. We think of celebrations for big things â birthdays, anniversaries, big launches â but sometimes we can just celebrate the small things like showing up 1 minute early. Or everyone wearing the same color shirt.
- Your biggest growth is ahead of you. When you frame your decisions knowing your best success is ahead of you, it keeps you focused on the future â not the past. Invest heavily in your growth. Real success is not an accident. It's not luck. The best dedicate themselves to being the best they can be â often in ways that "ordinary" people can't see and don't understand. I find that inspiring. I created Mental Mastery to see how to apply these principles in everyday life â how to take control of your mind and become happier and more successful. [Join]()[Mental Mastery](). When you do, youâll start playing the unspoken, hidden game that allows winners to keep winning while everyone else â even smart, talented people â get stuck and don't even know why. Youâll discover: - How to develop unwavering focus â the #1 competitive advantage in our age of never-ending social media distraction
- The #1 thing you can do now â starting TODAY â to practically guarantee success in any area of your life (whether that's your job, your business, dating, or in the gym)
- Why your goals are holding you back. Plus, how to jumpstart your motivation (in under 10 minutes) by throwing away your loftiest ambitions And so much more. It took me years of work, research, networking, and sheer trial-and-error to understand, distill, and finally be able to teach how YOU can develop these skills. Right now, you can get access to everything Iâve learned, risk-free. [Signature] [Join Mental Mastery now]() P.S. If you even think you might be interested, do me a favor. Take 3 minutes to check out the product page and decide if itâs right for you. If not, no sweat, at least you made the decision instead of missing out by default. â [Logo] [insta]() [Twitter]() [twitter]() [youtube]() [Linkedin]() This email was sent to [{EMAIL} .]() If you no longer wish to receive these emails you may [unsubscribe]( at any time. I Will Teach You To Be Rich 548 Market St #89946 San Francisco, CA 94104-5401