How to Cram 2 Months of Learning into 1 Day | Josh Waitzkin | The Tim Ferriss Show

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2024
  • Take 10 seconds and sign up for my free "5-Bullet Friday" newsletter: go.tim.blog/5-bullet-friday-yt/ Each Friday, you’ll get a short email from me with five things I've discovered that week, sending you off to your weekend with fun and useful things to ponder and try. 🙌
    Josh Waitzkin, author of The Art of Learning, is an eight-time US National Chess Champion, a two-time World Champion in Tai Chi Chuan Push Hands, and the first Brazilian Jiu Jitsu Black Belt under nine-time World Champion Marcelo Garcia.
    For the past 12 years, Josh has been channeling his passion for the outer limits of the learning process toward training elite mental performers in business and finance, and to revolutionizing the education system through his nonprofit foundation, The Art of Learning Project. Josh is currently in the process of taking on his fourth and fifth disciplines, paddle surfing and foiling, and is an all-in father and husband.
    The audio and video were recorded at the Sohn Conference in David Geffen Hall at Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, New York City.
    The Sohn Conference is dedicated to supporting innovative initiatives to cure and treat pediatric cancer. The Sohn Conference Foundation raises its funds through a unique strategy: Wall Street's most successful investors to offer their expertise on stage, and inspire large audiences to give to The Foundation's cause. You can learn more about it at sohnconference.org.
    00:00 Start
    02:17 Two months of learning per day + foiling
    05:41 Harnessing unconscious learning
    9:33 Top biomarkers
    11:03 Resonant frequency
    12:14 Trigger work
    13:38 Tracking heart rate variability (HRV)
    17:36 How to structure your days
    20:05 Identifying peak energy
    22:41 Finding your Most Important Question
    26:31 The art of letting go (and revving up)
    29:58 The benefits of unplugging and learning to say no
    33:46 Identifying your zone of genius
    (With thanks to Salem Morelli.)
    SUBSCRIBE: bit.ly/1dSzTkW
    About Tim Ferriss:
    Tim Ferriss is one of Fast Company’s “Most Innovative Business People” and an early-stage tech investor/advisor in Uber, Facebook, Twitter, Shopify, Duolingo, Alibaba, and 50+ other companies. He is also the author of five #1 New York Times and Wall Street Journal bestsellers: The 4-Hour Workweek, The 4-Hour Body, The 4-Hour Chef, Tools of Titans and Tribe of Mentors. The Observer and other media have named him “the Oprah of audio” due to the influence of his podcast, The Tim Ferriss Show, which has exceeded 300 million downloads and been selected for “Best of iTunes” three years running.
    Connect with Tim Ferriss:
    Sign up for "5-Bullet Friday" (Tim's email newsletter): go.tim.blog/5-bullet-friday-1/
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Комментарии • 314

  • @timferriss
    @timferriss  Год назад

    Take 10 seconds and sign up for my free "5-Bullet Friday" newsletter: go.tim.blog/5-bullet-friday-yt/ Each Friday, you’ll get a short email from me with five things I've discovered that week, sending you off to your weekend with fun and useful things to ponder and try. 🙌

  • @donliu1634
    @donliu1634 5 лет назад +567

    Some takeaways:
    1. Deliberate practice is important. Practice long and hard for scenarios that will occur.
    2. End with a bang. This is the part that really gets drilled into your brain.
    3. If possible, use biometrics. Let your body guide your decisions.
    4. Be proactive and not reactive.
    5. Sit on a most important question before you sleep and let your sub conscious find you the answers.
    6. Step away with gas left in the tank. Circulate between complete relaxation, and complete high intensity focus, and not in the middle.
    7. Have a trigger. Find something that can bring you to the zone at a moment's notice.

    • @MichaelBerezny
      @MichaelBerezny 5 лет назад +6

      don liu thank you for this 👊🏼

    • @davidgrigsby8963
      @davidgrigsby8963 5 лет назад +4

      Man... great note-taking. Thank u for this. I'm juggling so much, I didn't know how I was gonna go back and do this, too (but, I KNEW... somehow I would HAVE TO!). 'So, helpful!

    • @eeeee49976
      @eeeee49976 5 лет назад +2

      hi, how to end with a bang ?

    • @daverozelle5229
      @daverozelle5229 5 лет назад +4

      Great notes - but I would call out that your number 5 can be misread/interpreted.
      At about 26:31 it discussed (and later reiterated) that you should take the MIQ and '...let it go.' (or something like that) and allow your mind to be free. I believe it is the short focus and then allowing your conscience to detach that really allows answers to come in. Kind of like when you know an answer but because you so intensely focused on remembering it that it escapes you until you are distracted and then, BAM! it jumps into your mind.

    • @damionm121
      @damionm121 5 лет назад +3

      BLACK WHY let’s say you’re at the gym and you’re exhausted, but you have 4 sets to go. Do you relax because you’re tired or do you give it every thing you’ve got? End with a bang!

  • @salemschannel
    @salemschannel 3 года назад +68

    2:18 - Introduction
    8:30 - Josh Talks about Skiing
    9:54 - What types of bio-markers do you track in coaching clients
    11:34 - What is an individual's Resonance Frequency?
    12:14 - What is Trigger Work?
    13:41 - What types of tools do you use for tracking HRV?
    18:00 - What mechanisms can people use to better structure their days?
    24:25 - Regarding MIQ(Most Important Question) is it specific or can it be broad?
    30:56 - How do you teach people to block time for more focused work?

    • @DarthMessias
      @DarthMessias Год назад +1

      ...but what about chess?

    • @salemschannel
      @salemschannel 10 месяцев назад

      @@derekday ?

    • @salemschannel
      @salemschannel 10 месяцев назад

      @@DarthMessias I don't think they talk about chess in depth or at all in this one.

    • @pckovuru06
      @pckovuru06 10 месяцев назад +1

      Last thing you do & how strong/good or bad you finish a session gets brunt into you over night,
      So always finish on good/strong note
      Hear Rate Variability is a powerful way to get into deep concentration, train for HRV
      - HRV breathing to your resonance frequency.
      - Ideal way is to work w/ HRV specialist, find your frequency & do breath work 20 min twice a day
      - Dr. Lagos is a specialist
      Trigger Work - Get into peak performance and trigger with a song or smell etc
      Use technology to develop the ability to feel
      - Use biofeedback
      - Train your intuition, somatic introspection, to feel your level & adjust as necessary
      How to structure performer’s day, day architecture?
      - Proactive Day vs Reactive Day, put thinking time when your peak creative & energy is most intense
      - Find your peak time
      - Rate 1-10 how your creative & energy levels are at different parts of the day & examine
      - End the day strong
      - Focus on what matters most
      - Build musculature to focus on what matters most
      Peak Performance Structure
      - End your day thinking about the most important question in what you do/Strong
      - Wake up in the morning first thing you do is brainstorm on it, pre-input
      - During middle of day Pose yourself the question & release the mind and then come back to the
      Question
      - Train ability to focus on Most Important Question (MIQ)
      Healthy Feedback to MIQ
      - Track MIQ throughout week: what did you think MIQ is now and then come back to MIQ after you’ve done
      work some time later,The gap is often where you devote the work
      When unsure are there other types of MIQ that people can ask?
      - Broader question when you don’t know MIQ is:
      - What’s my intuitive thought about the topic at hand? Ex. What’s my intuition of my thinking
      - Tactical Question: Example Study video of foil session & leave the whole question in my mind and then ask what’s the biggest lesson to take out of it or drill into
      - Areas of being stuck is where to focus for MIQ
      This process leads to waking up with solutions, crystalized thinking in creative process.
      Art of Letting Go:
      - Finish something with a bit left, a sense of direction, so you can come back to it next day, relax & get
      Good sleep, don’t think about it in bed.
      - Relaxation is key to peak performance
      Options for people who can’t turn off
      - Learn to say No to free up
      - it’s about intensity of work & not how long you do it
      Meditate 30 mins during day & evening will make you see the signal thru noise
      Ability to determine what matters most is affected by ability to identify your zone of genius, also
      Going from 0 to 100 is dependent of Zone of Genius (ZOG)
      How do you determine where your Zone of Genius (ZOG) is?
      - So many frames to understand who we are. Ex. visual, kinesthetic, what are patterns behind
      your successes & errors
      - Look at it Personally, Professionally, Technically, Psychologically. Breaking down boundaries
      Between personal & professional life.
      - ask yourself “what are the things that have driven our greatest insights?” And “What are the
      Things that have Locked us up most in life. Understand the seeds of those questions.
      Goal is unobstructed self expression
      - Understand what self expression is & who we are as a learner.
      - Embrace every element of our funk & build around it
      - Express core of your being thru the work you’re doing

  • @anthonypassafiumeiii8153
    @anthonypassafiumeiii8153 Год назад +2

    His answers or questions are all over the place.

  • @grltrader
    @grltrader 5 лет назад +2

    I heard the podcast version... It went by so fast that I felt like I was gasping for air. Short and sweet with a great take away. Learning is doing.. period.
    Thanks Tim and Josh.

  • @Aesthetic_Euclides
    @Aesthetic_Euclides 3 года назад +11

    I feel like this conversation is such a gem. Will definitely watch it multiple times

  • @Deb.L.
    @Deb.L. 3 года назад +11

    18:30 - 'what I have been doing my whole life is... ending my day thinking about the most important question in what I do, and waking up first thing in the morning, pre input, brainstorming on it, this is an incredibly powerful tool... what you are doing that way is you are systematically opening the channel between the conscious and the unconscious mind'

    • @3lmi__319
      @3lmi__319 Год назад +1

      your absolutely right, it's also good to be in your thoughts as you can find a chain in thoughts that come successively, so you can find the origin of your limiting beleifs if you reflect long enough

  • @jaimanlive
    @jaimanlive 4 года назад +7

    Quick Notes: I need to watch this in 75. I love how this content is so rich that I have spent at least an hour on 18 min. The two pages of notes are packed with terms like H.R.V. Training, Trigger Work, Stop Gap Mesures,Somatic Ability,Raising of the basis line resonance and people like Dr. Legos? Not sure of some of the exact term, but that's what Google is for.
    The second half is equally rich. Crafting the day, week and months is power. It's even better on when looked at in the Micro, Mezo and Macro as you mentioned how Josh likes to think. The idea of ending my day strong then on the most important question is powerful.
    With that question In the morning, pre input and brain storming on it over time making it systematicalical.
    His example: Opening Ever Note and Riffing on it. The term "making smaller cycles is great stuff.
    The ability to pose a question and come back to it is like Doing Polmoderos when studying backed by spaced repartition. I will implement all the concepts and the use of MIQ Gap Analysis!! Very good talk... ** To anyone reading this, these are my notes of this talk, they are not grammatically correct or spell checked but, I hope this helped you as much as it did me?

    • @jigneshpadia
      @jigneshpadia 3 года назад +1

      Please forgive me for my ignorance. What is HRV stand for?

  • @christianarceneaux1750
    @christianarceneaux1750 2 года назад +1

    Wowwwwww it’s crazy how in tune he is with himself to know his frequency- mainly attained from deep meditation and awareness - but in motion and in activity to essentially have the same consecutiveness and intuitiveness in the different activities

  • @samuelallen8945
    @samuelallen8945 5 лет назад +22

    Josh is one of my favorite thinkers on earth - THANK YOU, Tim!

  • @gambarusso
    @gambarusso 5 лет назад +36

    "Simmering at 6". That resonated deeply with me. Thank you!

  • @JoshSnyman
    @JoshSnyman 5 лет назад +7

    Love this and if I took away anything, it was the importance of intuitively assessing yourself and analysing that feedback without distraction (from phones, people, etc). Also, the releasing and relaxing part, "The Art of Letting Go."

  • @sinvermerlas5331
    @sinvermerlas5331 3 года назад +1

    Such a treasure. Thank you so much for sharing this Tim and Josh!

  • @TwoHandsCooking
    @TwoHandsCooking 4 года назад

    If you feel like you’re expressing the core of your being through what you’re doing, it is beautiful and fulfilling to you. Doing something the way someone is telling you to do something is not the same as doing something the way you want to and in the way which you see as expressive of your core being.

  • @teemad
    @teemad 4 года назад

    Tim, I first listened to this on the podcast and didn't really get into it, because it felt oddly disjointed and some of audio cues just didn't resonate for some reason. But I didn't know there was a video version. Now that I am watching it the experience is noticeably different! Been a fan of you for some time now (listen to the podcast every week) and very very impressed with Josh. Thanks for sharing and thanks for all that you do.

  • @SimulationSeries
    @SimulationSeries 4 года назад +2

    Love these crucial dialogues, thanks so much Tim, Josh, and Sohn Conference!

  • @JasonAKMitchell86
    @JasonAKMitchell86 5 лет назад +4

    This is one I might get transcribed and take with me and highlight like a mad man. This is pure gold!!!

  • @TheFiPhysicist
    @TheFiPhysicist 5 лет назад +9

    Wow, I aspire to speak like this man. So calm, confident and connected. Amazing interview.

    • @Curiousnessify
      @Curiousnessify 5 лет назад +3

      aspire to be a better version of yourself not a clone of somebody else

    • @billyfudd818
      @billyfudd818 5 лет назад

      @@Curiousnessify; Seems to me Rory just wants the gifts of the gab the dudes share

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад

    First time seeing and hearing (adult) Josh and was exactly how i expected, i was surprised and not surprised, if you read this guys works, you will realize they talk exactly how they write and you will recognize many ideas here, but it's good to see they bunched together and updated in simpler and more direct form. If you want to see all the concepts mentioned here in a more in depth and anecdotal way, with stories of how they developed and refined those techniques over the years, i highly recommend you to read their books and articles. You're life will never be the same.

  • @gambarusso
    @gambarusso 5 лет назад +3

    For months meditation has been knocking on my door, can't ignore it any more. Thank you!

    • @anejaG55
      @anejaG55 5 лет назад +1

      eliaking do it. I also started 5-6 months ago. Sam harris waking up app is good starting point.

    • @gambarusso
      @gambarusso 5 лет назад

      ​@@anejaG55 Awesome, I'll give it a try. I really liked his guided meditation, but only did it a few times. Thanks brother!

  • @seanpmcg99
    @seanpmcg99 4 года назад +7

    1. Always approach with a beginners mindset.
    2. Deliberate practice is important. Practice long and hard for scenarios that will occur.
    3. End with a bang. This is the part that really gets drilled into your brain.
    4. If possible, use biometrics. Let your body guide your decisions.
    5. Be proactive and not reactive.
    6. Sit on a most important question before you sleep and let your sub conscious find you the answers.
    7. Step away with gas left in the tank. Circulate between complete relaxation, and complete high intensity focus, and not in the middle.
    8. Have a trigger. Find something that can bring you to the zone at a moment's notice.

  • @innovation3176
    @innovation3176 2 года назад

    Everyone in here is Real, love y’all and keep up the good work.

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад

    35:18 You nailed it precisely, there's this weird social craziness where to feel good about ones own decision they try to push it on others, like everyone is the same, knows, feels and wants the same things.

  • @Rabeyaru
    @Rabeyaru 2 года назад

    Thank you for this wonderful talk.

  • @elsonc8308
    @elsonc8308 4 года назад

    Thanks a lot for sharing this Tim!

  • @edgardosantana
    @edgardosantana 5 лет назад +22

    This was such a rich conversation!!! Also, really excited to see that he's writing again!! I'm buying 100% for sure. All the best!

  • @Deb.L.
    @Deb.L. 3 года назад +1

    18:26 - 'the entanglement of genius and eccentricity, or brilliance and madness, is so complex and so critical... there are so many dysfunctional habits I have seen that drive creation, and there are so many people who do things by the book that are mediocre'

  • @MattCarrasco
    @MattCarrasco 4 года назад

    Impressive, Thank you for sharing. 🙏🏾

  • @twixjunkie
    @twixjunkie 4 года назад +1

    This dude is my hero.

  • @denisschaffer1223
    @denisschaffer1223 4 года назад

    I feel inspired! Successful conversation. Many thanks.

  • @nathaniel4334
    @nathaniel4334 4 года назад

    Great discussion. Thank you.

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад

    13:08 The Trigger part and this part are amazing cause if you read his book you know EXACTLY what he's talking about

  • @FiddiTwo
    @FiddiTwo 5 лет назад +35

    i could listen to Josh for hours ... would kill to get a session or two with him ... more Josh in longer form please Tim :) And holy crap ... he's writing !

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад

    22:26 Amazing how he still uses concepts from the book!!!!

  • @stankarpenko
    @stankarpenko 5 лет назад +122

    This is so jam-packed with insights I had to re-watch 6 times ;) Tim, thank you for preparing so well and asking amazing questions! This is your gift to the world!

    • @rasmus7400
      @rasmus7400 3 года назад +3

      Take notes instead lol ;)

    • @baymaxred4632
      @baymaxred4632 3 года назад +2

      can you make a list for us? what we need to do

    • @jonnamechange6854
      @jonnamechange6854 3 года назад

      @@baymaxred4632 You can look up ketosis yourself

    • @lenkabo5350
      @lenkabo5350 Год назад +1

      @@rasmus7400I am watching for the 3rd time, taking notes every single time. The thing is, you get more connections and realizations with each replay. There is a lot of gold in Josh’s mind.

    • @rasmus7400
      @rasmus7400 Год назад

      @@lenkabo5350 I see 🤔

  • @Xonatron
    @Xonatron 3 года назад

    12:14 - trigger work... fascinating tool.

  • @jordanjardine2458
    @jordanjardine2458 5 лет назад +2

    Awesome talk. Josh really knows how to leave us wanting more! I can't wait for his next book.

  • @IamJustinM
    @IamJustinM 5 лет назад +25

    Holy smokes, Christmas in July.

  • @xNajda
    @xNajda 5 лет назад +3

    Wow what an amazing episode. So much actionable advice and room for extra introspection; I'm sure if I followed even half of what was said I'd be at least 2x further than I am now.

  • @thedudewhoabides69
    @thedudewhoabides69 5 лет назад +1

    This is a great interview, as usual when it comes from you. Thanks a lot and keep writing and doing your thing!

  • @Thebitcoinconsultant
    @Thebitcoinconsultant 5 лет назад +9

    Good conversation thank you Tim and Josh. Would love to hear more on specifically how Josh approached mastery of chess as well as his other accomplishments in Jiu Jitsu i.e. systems and routines.

    • @chrischardon6621
      @chrischardon6621 5 лет назад +4

      There are two good resources for Josh/chess. One is the film Searching for Bobby Fischer, which is about his childhood and dedication to chess. The other is Josh's own book The Art of Learning, which talks about quite a bit of it as well.

    • @scottk1525
      @scottk1525 Год назад

      Step 1: be a child prodigy
      Step 2: have a singular passion
      Step 3: have rich parents that can hire the Yoda of coaches
      Step 4: Dedicate your entire life to this single pursuit
      Step 5: Spend the rest of your life pretending that your "mastery" was due to your unique approach to learning
      Step 6: Profit

    • @Thebitcoinconsultant
      @Thebitcoinconsultant Год назад +2

      @@scottk1525 so bitter

    • @scottk1525
      @scottk1525 Год назад

      @@Thebitcoinconsultant It's an empty conversation from two pretentious d-bags. I'm just calling it out.

  • @carrow1057
    @carrow1057 3 года назад

    OMG the last 5 minutes of this was truly riveting!!!!!!!!!@!

  • @rayaudelo1024
    @rayaudelo1024 5 лет назад +2

    A really informative video.

  • @hyunukryu261
    @hyunukryu261 5 лет назад +2

    pure gem wow

  • @Ian.lifts.
    @Ian.lifts. 5 лет назад +6

    Every book he writes or podcast he does ignites fire within.

  • @JeanPatrickSmith
    @JeanPatrickSmith 5 лет назад +81

    my major take away: macho duck, 1979

  • @aditiaggarwal9966
    @aditiaggarwal9966 4 года назад +2

    Really insightful
    And yet after watching it, I'm learning 2 months of stuff in 2 months

  • @sterlingseah
    @sterlingseah 5 лет назад +1

    Yep two of the best, can’t wait to watch it

  • @googleaccount1495
    @googleaccount1495 5 лет назад +5

    Amazing. This is what the product of self actualisation process looks like. Don't be fooled that these are simple tips you can implement on the snap of a finger. They are a glimpses of thought processes as a result of years of conscious practice, when you put the work into it and face what is called life.

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад

    17:25 And i heard that is the same with measuring food, you get an intuitive sense for the grams over (but even then eyeballing your calories is trick according to Greg Nuckols)

  • @BlackGirlGreenThumb
    @BlackGirlGreenThumb 4 года назад +38

    It’s going to take me 2 months just to understand this video 😩

    • @blissfulbeats3690
      @blissfulbeats3690 4 года назад +4

      it'll be worth it, you gonna find this video again at some point and be amazed at how much you already integrated in your life and how much you understand

    • @arturoreyesreyes6096
      @arturoreyesreyes6096 4 года назад

      It's just bullshit. Don't even worry about it. He said basically nothing.

    • @borisleoro8943
      @borisleoro8943 9 месяцев назад

      Lol

  • @l.w.paradis2108
    @l.w.paradis2108 3 года назад +1

    Josh is a truly brilliant and generous person. I hope he is mindful of the risks he has decided to embrace.

  • @smilebot484
    @smilebot484 5 лет назад +2

    Ferriss has become a brilliant interviewer. He got out of the way but skillfully jumped in at opportune moments. I think Josh is amazing and an inspiration. Can't wait to read his book.

  • @ExtremelyTastyBread
    @ExtremelyTastyBread 3 года назад +2

    "The idea is to train your intuition, your somatic introspection, to feel when your quality of presence, your quality of energy, is slipping form like a 10 to a 9." now I know why I've yet to become a "top mental performer": it's all about the somatic introspection

  • @electric-surfboard
    @electric-surfboard 5 лет назад

    Nice job!

  • @AlexZeBeast
    @AlexZeBeast 5 лет назад

    Tim Ferriss is so absorbed in what Josh is saying about surfing, haha. I love it.
    Absolutely amazing. Thank you for this Tim!

  • @DrewRoberts
    @DrewRoberts 5 лет назад +5

    Josh Waitzkin is awesome. How do I pre-order this new book?

  • @CoachAna
    @CoachAna 3 месяца назад

    I know this comment is random but I was sitting at my desk watching this taking notes and my daughter walks in the room (she's a kid) yaw drops and points to the screen---MOMMY IS THAT MEGAMIND (the kid's comedy cartoon movie) IN real life?? (pointing at Tim) I looked at her and said mmm kinda lol I mean I would call him a MEGAMIND hahah it made my day that she said that and now I can't unsee it just wanted to share... anyway thank you and great content!

  • @volaksin5842
    @volaksin5842 5 лет назад +138

    I feel like the title of this video should be "How a Genius Crams 2 Months of Learning into 1 Day." For us muggles, it would be more like, "How to Cram 2 Months of Learning into 2 months."

    • @matthewdonovan1534
      @matthewdonovan1534 5 лет назад +5

      Hahahahaha

    • @anejaG55
      @anejaG55 5 лет назад +24

      He’s a human being as you are. Don’t limit yourself man. Unobstructed self expression that’s the goal. Cheers.

    • @DAMfoxygrampa
      @DAMfoxygrampa 5 лет назад +3

      "How to be completely unable to learn what should be 2 months worth of material"

    • @menlo7256
      @menlo7256 4 года назад

      How to Cram 2 months Into 4 months even

    • @damianmurray99
      @damianmurray99 4 года назад

      Very random discussion but props for having a gym with Marcelo Garcia!

  • @ClearOutSamskaras
    @ClearOutSamskaras 5 лет назад +2

    3:37 "Burning in..." Remember that you too did this and how you could apply it now...

  • @NPRoberto
    @NPRoberto 4 года назад

    An Interview With Josh Waitzkin: Navel-gazing Taken to the Next Level

  • @SmokeEater509
    @SmokeEater509 4 месяца назад

    Just watched "Searching for Bobby Fischer" last night. Fantastic movie.

  • @ryanjones9103
    @ryanjones9103 4 года назад

    End your day strong, that's interesting
    The universe is not a chaos, so is everything around and in you, that's why you keep thinking and searching the correlation, or the core things if you will.
    The video mainly talks about how to get things done more efficiently, and there are some universally fundamental principles that can be followed in searching for efficiency.
    Concentration is the key here, so keep in mind that you must always love what you do, remember, don't cheat on yourself.

  • @wally19
    @wally19 3 года назад

    just go and get the audiobook, its great.

  • @prestoX
    @prestoX 4 года назад +1

    That's dense conversion ! his book should be quite interesting then,anyone has read it ?

  • @medelinejs1173
    @medelinejs1173 Год назад

    The genius!

  • @woocashky
    @woocashky 5 лет назад +2

    26:30 -> I hear what he's saying but the entire talk is the exact opposite of that important premise (though, I understand that wasn't their intention either...) - I know that because the biggest milestone of productivity I've ever had was letting go of trying to use ALL the productivity "hacks" out there - not in the sense of being passive and lazy, but, rather, allowing shit to grow organically on their own accord...
    Here's the biggest takeaway I got from the interview: (18:10) "everything I do (in coaching capacity) is INDIVIDUALISED" - exactly! so, in this line of thought, I take one thing that jives with me from a quality resource; I'll test and try to integrate it in my life; feedback? -> move to the next one when I feel like it. (yes, meditation helps to recognise and orient the feeling much faster)
    I also have a feeling that Josh's way of thinking is so "out there" that it's almost like asking Daniel Tammet to teach you Icelandic.
    i.e. "(18:47) don't do everything by the book and become mediocre" > rat-a-tat-tat-tat-tat proceeds to explain 1000 things and how he does them by the book (including relaxing and drinking wine...)
    Brilliantly useless interview.

    • @ms.hjohnson6820
      @ms.hjohnson6820 5 лет назад +2

      Lucas Hawro What u were able to take away seems to b very different from what others were. We all receive what we’re open to n what’s meant for us I suppose ✨

    • @woocashky
      @woocashky 5 лет назад +1

      H Jay -> and how were my findings different from everyone elses'? I skimmed through the comments and I see people either send praises but without specifics or get annoyed with "jargon and self help mumbo jumbo".
      And I didn't really take anything from that interview - I said it's useless.
      Because you don't need Waitzkin and 40 min video to essentially tell you that you need to "find your own way" to excel in life. Or do you...?

    • @ms.hjohnson6820
      @ms.hjohnson6820 5 лет назад

      Lucas Hawro all good :)

  • @chriscash782
    @chriscash782 5 лет назад +4

    That's very interesting regarding HRV, resonant frequency and what he said about using A song or scent to push faster into the peak performance state. I was meditating a while ago, for an extended period and couldn't gain and significant physical sensations which is sometimes my goal but one time I thought about the vocal solo for Bohemian Rhapsody and I sung it very clearly in my head and it immediately triggered intense, full body, endorphin like sensation throughout my body. It worked the following day although not as intense. It was very strange.

  • @mrsbraintrainer3375
    @mrsbraintrainer3375 4 года назад

    Obsessed

  • @codyr2318
    @codyr2318 2 года назад

    Very good.

  • @whosChrisHughes
    @whosChrisHughes 4 года назад +1

    how do we learn more about the HRV Breathing practice?

  • @luvvx3
    @luvvx3 5 лет назад

    josh waitzkin talks about day architecture a lot but how about week and month architecture? I would love to hear about itttttt 🙏✨

    • @redheat66
      @redheat66 5 лет назад +2

      if you learn this! only 1% understand you ca take over the world! 70 years in 10 years?
      when you 70 you are more like 700 YEARS OLD!

  • @ProHermitDenver
    @ProHermitDenver 3 года назад

    So this is the guy that i learn from him in th ChessMaster software.

  • @silverchairsg
    @silverchairsg 6 месяцев назад

    Josh's posture is incredibly, incredibly good. Compare it to Tim. Josh's mastery of Tai Chi shows.

  • @carrow1057
    @carrow1057 3 года назад

    I need a diagnostic from Josh!!!!!!!!!!

  • @pckovuru06
    @pckovuru06 10 месяцев назад +1

    Show Notes:
    Last thing you do & how strong/good or bad you finish a session gets brunt into you over night,
    So always finish on good/strong note
    Hear Rate Variability is a powerful way to get into deep concentration, train for HRV
    - HRV breathing to your resonance frequency.
    - Ideal way is to work w/ HRV specialist, find your frequency & do breath work 20 min twice a day
    - Dr. Lagos is a specialist
    Trigger Work - Get into peak performance and trigger with a song or smell etc
    Use technology to develop the ability to feel
    - Use biofeedback
    - Train your intuition, somatic introspection, to feel your level & adjust as necessary
    How to structure performer’s day, day architecture?
    - Proactive Day vs Reactive Day, put thinking time when your peak creative & energy is most intense
    - Find your peak time
    - Rate 1-10 how your creative & energy levels are at different parts of the day & examine
    - End the day strong
    - Focus on what matters most
    - Build musculature to focus on what matters most
    Peak Performance Structure
    - End your day thinking about the most important question in what you do/Strong
    - Wake up in the morning first thing you do is brainstorm on it, pre-input
    - During middle of day Pose yourself the question & release the mind and then come back to the
    Question
    - Train ability to focus on Most Important Question (MIQ)
    Healthy Feedback to MIQ
    - Track MIQ throughout week: what did you think MIQ is now and then come back to MIQ after you’ve done
    work some time later,The gap is often where you devote the work
    When unsure are there other types of MIQ that people can ask?
    - Broader question when you don’t know MIQ is:
    - What’s my intuitive thought about the topic at hand? Ex. What’s my intuition of my thinking
    - Tactical Question: Example Study video of foil session & leave the whole question in my mind and then ask what’s the biggest lesson to take out of it or drill into
    - Areas of being stuck is where to focus for MIQ
    This process leads to waking up with solutions, crystalized thinking in creative process.
    Art of Letting Go:
    - Finish something with a bit left, a sense of direction, so you can come back to it next day, relax & get
    Good sleep, don’t think about it in bed.
    - Relaxation is key to peak performance
    Options for people who can’t turn off
    - Learn to say No to free up
    - it’s about intensity of work & not how long you do it
    Meditate 30 mins during day & evening will make you see the signal thru noise
    Ability to determine what matters most is affected by ability to identify your zone of genius, also
    Going from 0 to 100 is dependent of Zone of Genius (ZOG)
    How do you determine where your Zone of Genius (ZOG) is?
    - So many frames to understand who we are. Ex. visual, kinesthetic, what are patterns behind
    your successes & errors
    - Look at it Personally, Professionally, Technically, Psychologically. Breaking down boundaries
    Between personal & professional life.
    - ask yourself “what are the things that have driven our greatest insights?” And “What are the
    Things that have Locked us up most in life. Understand the seeds of those questions.
    Goal is unobstructed self expression
    - Understand what self expression is & who we are as a learner.
    - Embrace every element of our funk & build around it
    - Express core of your being thru the work you’re doing

  • @filmmakinglifestyle
    @filmmakinglifestyle 4 года назад

    How has this guy never been on Rogan!?

  • @kittymachine3798
    @kittymachine3798 3 года назад +4

    I would love to know where the heck Josh and his family moved to... It sounds like heaven on Earth.

  • @DJSTOEK
    @DJSTOEK Год назад

    🖤

  • @anhudy
    @anhudy 5 лет назад +1

    Josh Waitzkin talks in 2x. Holy shit!

  • @fifty5712
    @fifty5712 3 года назад

    A tool that has helped me tremendously and gives feedback on how well a person is focusing, is a device called... "FOCI - Wearable that Boosts Your Focus".
    Would highly recommend if it fits in your budget!

  • @ErgyATL
    @ErgyATL 5 лет назад +16

    I've read his book, it was great. I've listened to his previous interviews with Tim, and it was good but I felt like I was too far beyond to understand everything. Now this one... I'm older and hopefully wiser and all I hear is a bunch of nothing and jargon. No value. Do you guys agree or not?

    • @anejaG55
      @anejaG55 5 лет назад +2

      Ergy there were 2-3 really good points in there. The last question was really good about the unobstructed self expression. Also the letting go thing is important in today 24hr connected world. That’s what meditation is for.

    • @JakeRichardsong
      @JakeRichardsong 5 лет назад

      Seems hard to follow, very unstructured and rambling, maybe with several points.

    • @xmchughs
      @xmchughs 5 лет назад +1

      Lots of good information here. Maybe try slowing down the video?

    • @ErgyATL
      @ErgyATL 5 лет назад

      xmchughs Haha maybe... It just sounds like rambling. I don't really hear anything actionable. What did you get from it?

    • @borisleoro8943
      @borisleoro8943 9 месяцев назад

      It has good info but it's a lot of rambling. It's super basic

  • @davywilliams8048
    @davywilliams8048 5 лет назад

    That's a Lift E-foil that he's riding. It's such a new concept that probably half the audience has no idea how he's flying over the water and what the undercarriage of the board looks like.

    • @finchdoobies
      @finchdoobies 5 лет назад

      Yo everyone knows what foil is bruh

  • @j0hannes5
    @j0hannes5 5 лет назад +3

    When Tim mentioned foiling in the introduction, I didn't think it would be something cool :D

  • @Nomadbushman
    @Nomadbushman 3 года назад

    I want there to be more focus put on mental skill acquisition.

  • @ClearOutSamskaras
    @ClearOutSamskaras 4 года назад +1

    12:10 The Trigger

  • @markespinosa5311
    @markespinosa5311 3 года назад +1

    All of a sudden Josh finds himself surrounded by 20 ninjas. Without hesitation, he begins reciting Eminem’s Lose yourself to the beat of his fists pummeling masked faces. The dust settles, the ninjas lay lifeless. Josh, silhouetted by the moon glow says, “the opportunity comes once in a life time yo.”

  • @xiongbenjamin
    @xiongbenjamin Год назад

    I admire Josh's pursuit to excellence and all the great things he's doing. But trying to comprehend his book and his talks is
    hard. Being great at something doesn't translate to being a good teacher. Teaching is another skill itself.

  • @bains273
    @bains273 5 лет назад +6

    So this guy can make magnus carlsen think hard about his next move n wrestle with khabib at the same time .cool

    • @mikecantreed
      @mikecantreed 5 лет назад +2

      Doubtful. He quit before grandmaster and hasn't touched chess pieces in decades

  • @EthanSchwandtTheMindMapGuy
    @EthanSchwandtTheMindMapGuy 5 лет назад

    Wow this is serendipity! I just did a Mind Map of Josh's Book on my Channel..
    (Released the same day this was). World works in mysterious ways!
    Thanks for the podcast guys!

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад

    15:15 I'M THE SAME WAY!!!!!

  • @pathikd
    @pathikd 5 лет назад +10

    Great questions from Tim, though felt like Josh gave out more generalized or broader answer rather than being a bit more specific.

    • @wengerboy
      @wengerboy 5 лет назад +3

      I love Josh listened to all of his interviews but its always general and abstract nothing specific, its so frustrating.

    • @pathikd
      @pathikd 5 лет назад +1

      Spiritthoughts I agree.. i mean come on he didn’t even want to give away his HRV instruments name!!

    • @the0cool0guy
      @the0cool0guy 5 лет назад +2

      When someone is less specific, I begin to trust them. Because they know one truth doesn't apply equally to all under all situations. Because the idea is different from expressions of it.

    • @HesterLiong
      @HesterLiong 5 лет назад

      there is good and bad for generalized.. it really breaks down the first principle of the subject rather than just giving examples..

    • @the0cool0guy
      @the0cool0guy 5 лет назад

      @@HesterLiong I do agree though that it takes another kind of personal generosity to give specifics and details.
      I should read his book.

  • @ianborukho
    @ianborukho 5 лет назад +11

    What if learning is actually much simpler and more intuitive than this?

    • @ragmehra
      @ragmehra 5 лет назад +7

      It is, but he's a pro, so he's talking about the stuff you need to use to compete at the highest level.
      So basically, he starts with one thing, learns as much as he can from just that one thing, and then adds something else, incorporating everything he learned in the first lesson through triggering the second lesson . . . and so on. Eventually you trigger whatever it is you're working on right now, and everything you've ever known and needed before comes to hand, or as he likes to call it , you end up in the peak state.

    • @ianborukho
      @ianborukho 5 лет назад +2

      @@ragmehra totally get it and acknowledge his results. I guess I mostly wonder if their are diminishing returns for some of these tricks especially in disciplines where the best of the best didn't use all these techniques but instead were just into it and did the thing. It seems even more strange to use techniques for high level athletics for business/corporate settings. I feel like simply understanding a subject matter and generally practicing recall and clarity should bring you most of the way.

    • @ragmehra
      @ragmehra 5 лет назад +4

      @@ianborukho Yeah, his results were found through his own experience in learning the game, he uses his own explanations and rationalizations to explain what he does. We can take inspiration from how he approaches learning, but at the end of the day we have to figure these things out for ourselves, in our own ways.

    • @davidgrigsby8963
      @davidgrigsby8963 5 лет назад +1

      @@ragmehra, great synopsis. I've done my own (more rudimentary experimenting [as these two do]) for yrs.. But, I'd love to do so at their highest level/training for optimal 'Peak States'. How's ur personal process been re: this/these concepts?

    • @cyrusjulian187
      @cyrusjulian187 5 лет назад

      So basically he’s sorta doing NLP Neuro Linguistic Programming by using triggers?

  • @finnjake6174
    @finnjake6174 5 лет назад

    i didn't get the red thread.

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад

    20:40 The perks of having good parents...

  • @GustavoSilva-ny8jc
    @GustavoSilva-ny8jc Год назад

    28:07 Musashi style

  • @redheat66
    @redheat66 5 лет назад +1

    They speak about common thing in uncommon terms and word....

  • @anejaG55
    @anejaG55 5 лет назад +3

    Unobstructed self expression. That’s the goal!

  • @ekbergiw
    @ekbergiw 5 лет назад +16

    Watch at double speed i dare you

    • @DaxFlyingwoodHunter
      @DaxFlyingwoodHunter 4 года назад +10

      Excellent recommendation. We crammed 39 minutes of learning into 19!

    • @2ears1mouth786
      @2ears1mouth786 3 года назад

      @@DaxFlyingwoodHunter NOT GOOD ENOUGH. lol

  • @NYCTalkingcom
    @NYCTalkingcom 3 года назад +1

    I trained BJJ with Josh before he went to Marcelo over at Marcos Santos. This guy is a scientist in everything he does. Watching him work is truly beautiful.