You're never going to master something unless you understand this...
July 19, 2018
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[Altucher Confidential]
âYou're never going to master something unless you understand this...â
[Robert Greene]
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Five years ago I interviewed one of my all-time favorite authors and brilliant thinkers. Now, Iâm bringing this interview back to the surface. Itâs about mastery. But before you can master something, you have to know what that âsomethingâ is.
So I asked Robert Greene, bestselling author of â48 Laws of Powerâ and âMastery.â
I said, âIf you were going to give someone the five minute summary of how to master a topic, what would be the most important factors to look at?â
âWell, the most important factor is chapter one in the book. Youâre never going to master something unless you understand this⦠the brain learns much better when weâre emotionally engaged, when we want to learn, when weâre motivated.â
He gave an example.
Letâs say you have to learn Spanish in school. Versus if youâre living in Spain, fall in love and want to learn the language of your lover.
The second is more motivating. Your heartâs in it.
So then it comes to the big question. âHow do I find my passion?â I get this question all the time.
One answer is fall in love.
But thatâs not so easy eitherâ¦
So Robert broke down the ABCâs for me. Iâll tell you what I learned. But first, I want to say that re-releasing this podcast episode helped me in two ways.
It helped me see how much Iâve changed in my podcasting. Even my voice sounds different. I can hear the youth of a 45 year old in this episode with Robert. It helped me remember one of the many reasons I do this podcast still⦠five years later. I love it. But thatâs not news. When Robert brought up this question of âfinding what you loveâ it created a force. That force (among others) are the questions and answers I hope to find. There are still so many unanswered questions. âHow do I find my passion?â âWhatâs joy?â âShould I quit my job?â âHow?â
Everyone I interview gives me a new question. I just hope that listening to this show helps you find your answer.
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The ABCâs of Mastery:
A) Attention Leads to Aim
Step one is find your direction.
"It takes time to figure out but it's so worth it," Robert said. âYou have to go through a process of looking at yourself.â
He told me about his consulting. âIâve dealt with many people who say, âIâm 35, Iâm 40. I donât know what Iâm meant to do. I really have no idea.â And thatâs troubling. Because that means youâre not listening to yourself. Youâre not aware of your own likes and dislikes. Youâve been paying too much attention to what other people are saying.â
Thatâs lesson number one. Notice what youâre paying attention to.
Notice what youâre giving your heart to.
I got a text once. It was from a stranger. I used to give out my number on old episodes of âAsk Altucherâ and then Iâd answer the questions on air. But sometimes Iâd just write back.
The text said, âWhat do you do when you donât know who you are anymore?â
I wrote back immediately. âUnlearn everything you thought you knew.â Unlearn who the âbossesâ are in your life. Unlearn the rules your parents taught you, school taught you, fear taught you.
Then dream.
Robert tells his clients, âLetâs go back. Letâs look at your childhood. Letâs look at the things that excited you. Letâs look at maybe where you went wrong. Letâs look at the things that you hate. If you hate working for a large company, if you hate politicking, youâre probably meant to be an entrepreneur and working for yourself on some level.â
He gave more examples in the podcast.
B) Build a Talent Stack
Robert told me about someone who went to law school. And hated being a lawyer. She wanted to write.
So she took the 3,000-4,000 hours put towards one career (law) and turned it into a new career (legal writer).
âTake the time that you think you wasted doing something else and apply it to something that really appeals to you.â
Make it part of your talent stack.
Meaning, your current job or whatever youâre doing doesnât have to be who you are. It can be part of your array of skills.
I learned this from Scott Adams who created of the famous Dilbert cartoon. He says, âItâs really hard to be the best in the world at one thing, but if you are âpretty goodâ at a bunch of things and use them together, you can succeed.â
So if you combine the talent stack theory with the 10,000 hour rule, you get new eyes and a new resume.
C) Creative Potential Is Either Used or Wasted
Robert reads 200-300 books to make one book. Itâs part of his research. He's read thousands of biographies. Heâll use lots of stories and quotes in his books.
âI have a quote in there from Davinci, which I loveâ¦â
âJust as a well-filled day brings blessed sleep, so a well-employed life brings a blessed death.â
âThe idea is that if youâve felt like youâve realized your potential, you almost feel like you can die a happy person.â
âSo how do you do that?â
He told me about Steve Jobs and Nikola Tesla. They both obsessed over work. They obsessed over their potential. Which we all have.
Robert says in the podcast, âEverybody has creative potential. Everybody. And I think the worst feeling in life comes from the sense that as you get older you didnât somehow tap that potential. Youâre not expressing what you think you couldâve expressed.â
Sometimes we have to let go of the idea of what will happen if we gave ourselves a chance at the life we want⦠(Iâd lose my job, Iâd lose my house, I wonât have money, Iâll struggle) just to experience the idea of what could happen if it worked out.
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Sincerely,
[James Altucher]
James Altucher
P.S. Thereâs another podcast worth checking out today.Â
[â6 CORE LESSONS ON DREAMING + DOINGâ with Sasha Cohen](
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