Instant gratification also plays a part here, too. When the end result seems too far away, people convince themselves they aren't meant for it so they look for a quick fix and then soon feel lost all over again. Speaking from experience here.
Absolutely- I agree. We need to find ways through intrinsic interest to build some gratification into it. No one stays in a slog that stays a slog for very long. Great insight.
True. But if the 'end result' is at least visible (like, it took 1700 experiments for Edison to light the bulb, but he made progress because he saw himself reaching there), it matters a lot to observe patience. If for some reason your day didn't deliver you on to the end goal, you can always see how it's is very much possible and that it is only a matter of time. You are now a step closer.
Before, your string of thoughts and actions would have been 'I need to do this' -> Not actually doing it -> 'I really need to do this' -> Feeling stronger resistance -> 'I need to do this no matter what' -> Feeling self-remorse But through relaxation, your action patterns will change as the following: 'I should do this' -> Not actually doing it -> Relaxation -> Feeling lower resistance In such a way, you break away from the pattern of increasing your level of resistance, and create an opportunity to at least begin the work you need to do. search youtube "paradox of I can do it"
No joke, this might be the most important TED-talk of my life I recently realised that the reason I can't achieve my dreams for years, postponing even simple steps every single day because deep inside I'm so afraid of failure. And it is just an enormous relief to know it's not just my imagination or another excuse, but there actually people like me and I honestly feel like crying as I'm typing this. Thank you so much 😭
@@l.w.paradis2108 I understood your comment, but I too was confused seeing the word “shepherd”. I think that’s what may have come across as rude,but I know you meant well:). Have a good day.
(For future reference) The 3 cognitive distortions : 1) 2:57 "I just can't do it! I don't have what it takes" 2) 5:50 "this is just not who I am" 3) 10:22 "I should do this, I need to do this, *but eh I don't really want to do it though* I should do it" Solutions: 1) remind yourself that it is okay to fail. Learn from the failures and just keep swimming. Effort >> 2) find people who have the same values as you, and who found a way to make things work in a way that doesn't clash with those values. Find a way to do the things you wanna do in a way that aligns with and not clashes with your identity. 3) find your "why", the real reason why you wanna do something. It should be an intrinsic motivation and not a just superficial and external one. Remind yourself of your why to stay motivated
This is me. For the last 14 years I’ve done NOTHING concerning my dreams. I have wasted my life feeling sorry for myself and living for other people. I am so tired of it I am at the point of taking all the risks to get where I want to be.
Oh my God are you writing about me...Every word fits my life..And the reason I'm a failure is I never loved myself never took care of myself, all my life spent for others, and that's what dooms you..
Three main reason 1.deep in our mind we think we can't do it. 2. People like us dont do this because we are highly identified with a false self identity. 3.secretly we don't want it.
@@willnicholson18 If you watch the last third of the video you'll see the stuff about the value mindset. In there, pay attention to the part about what to do if there's nothing you can do to be intrinsically interested- basically, spend some time with WHY you need to do the part you don't like. Then, when you have to sit down and do it, you can ground back into the part of you that really wants this, and stay out of the part that is doing it for extrinsic interest, which sounds like it might be part of what's tripping you up.
I love people like you. I have about 250 videos based on psychology that I have put in a playlist and this cuts down the time it takes it to go through them significantly.
1. Shift your mindset from, "belief that some people have it and you don't," to "your rookie mistakes are just sign paths on the way to success." 2. Shift your mindset from, "People like you (i.e. your identity) don't do things like this," (and therefore you push hard against such behavior), to finding people who do things you want to do and mimmick them. 3. Shift your mindset from, "secretly you don't want to do it, you just think you SHOULD do it because the people you emulate to do it," to drawing a straight bright-line from your long-term dreams (e.g. buying a house, sitting with your children by a crackling fire) to the desired behavior instead of motivation such as becoming a wealthy, admired, 'cool' person. **If the work you want to do is hard, there WILL be urges in the moment to quit, and it is INTRINSIC INTEREST that keeps you focused on the actions you need to take. You have to build out the INTRINSIC INTEREST.**
Why we don’t do what we say we’ll do: 1. We get lost, distracted, or addicted to what’s more “pleasurable” or “comfortable” than what is important 2. We see “pain” in exerting the effort or we lack the energy required to do the important thing. 3. We don’t care because its not killing us anyway...not yet.
@@blueeloop we change once we “decide” to change. And ultimately we decide to change because of inspiration or “desperation.” In my experience, profound desperation is the more powerful emotion for change or action. All the best in your journey.
Thanks to Amanda Crowell for this inspiring talk. And also… for making me understand that “heart-centred, helper type, non competitive” people exist and can be successful in this world. Good luck to everybody who’s struggling.
I appreciate with whole my heart the person who funded Tedx talk. I have learned so many things through this stage. The people who deliver speeches the deliver the nectar of their experiences. I am so glad we have tedx talks in RUclips.
“To the ones who are there for me & who always have my back…… everything you are to me is everything I lack.” - BM TeamWork and finding the right ones to surround yourself with is major also because misery loves company and they’ll continue to feed your appetite of self gratification with false hope and accomplishments. Keep striving for greatness & stop settling for less than you deserve.
This is spot-on.. I didn't even know I was doing this! My dream is to become a musical theatre actress and although I am taking singing lessons, I always stop myself and think that I don't have what is required and that I have too little experience. Maybe I should, instead of procrastinating and whining, go out and GET experience, despite my brain telling me to stay home
Amanda, when you get to read this comment: Thank you for articulating the hidden intricacies that have been holding me back. Knowing that I am not the only one definitely helps. What is helping me even more is the realization of being defensive about my failure.
So the audience aren't good because: 1) Secretly they don't believe they can be a good audience 2) They don't think they are like people that can be a good audience 3)Being a good audience doesn't interest them enough, if they're honest
this is now my favorite ted-talk. sometimes i have dreams, sometimes none. it's confusing when you don't have a strong grip of who you actually are and who you actually want to be. because you often mistook it for who people expect you to be.
@@amandacrowellomg it's an honor!! but yes indeed! i started assuring myself that "as long as i believe in myself", i can make through whatever. of course i still am hesitant and anxious from time to time but ted talks and their wise speakers such as you really do help people (especially me) arrange their perspectives in a better lighting. so thank you sincerely. i am just a stranger but i am rooting for you and everyone else in their own journey. Fighting!
One reason I found social media such as RUclips and Instagram to be useful is that it exposed me to examples of success in fields I’m interested in who look like me or had similar circumstances to me which would’ve been hard to find otherwise in my small town and small circle of friends.
I watched this because I am keep saying that I will learn programming, tomorrow - next week - next weekend - next holiday and so on. I will write all the reasons why I want to learn programming and remind myself all the time when I need to. Thank you.
Once you have successfully managed to overcome these cognitive distorsions, something interesting happens to you. When you go off the beaten track and know deep in your gut that it's the right way to go, you will have to face criticism from people who claim to know better than you. Well, never ever listen to those who say you can not do it. Do what your heart says is right. Some people desperately want others to fail to feel better about themselves. You are not the problem, they are. You don't owe them anything. Instead, you should embrace your uniqueness and reach the dreams that you so desperately want to reach because you DESERVE to live a happy life. Always remember that we were born here on Earth to feel joy. Yes, the grind can be strenuous but your future self is there already thanking you for all the efforts you've put into reaching your goals. And I along many other people will be there, standing in awe over what you have accomplished to change your life for the better.
Love this comment section, most of us are in the right spot and needed to hear this! I have been good at things from the jump for most of my life..... But since 2020, I am trying to do something I'm not good at and the fear of failure or rejection from failing is very tough to acknowlege and deal with. It's silly but it's real.
Amanda Crowell, that was a great talk. Thank you. Sorry your audience was so flat. I've been having issues with procrastination, even though I've been an achiever...PhD scientist and composer, and a seeker of what is this life. My hunch is that grief, as well as your 3 potent points, is at the heart. I am going to focus on what you taught. Also, I've been geeking out on a wonderful podcast series by Stanford neurobiologist prof, Andrew Huberman. He spoke of the mindset research also
I think these things a lot. It holds me back. The fear of failure or that it isn't me or isn't meant for me is just all in the mind. Why do we do these things to hold ourselves back? Little by little, we could be anywhere we wanted just by taking the simple steps and allowing ourselves to fail and to learn and to grow.
The talk that reveals the actual reasons why we procrastinate or avoid doing things that are important for our GROWTH. This is one of the best TED Talks I have watched. I can't thank her and TED enough for bringing this to me... This is exactly what I needed to cure myself of procrastination... I am so grateful to TED and Amanda Crowell
This was a very good Ted talk. I always have struggled to keep up with goals. Now that I’ve gotten good advice I’m going to write down the steps I will take to accomplish my goals. I will allow myself to try what I want to do, and not be afraid of failure. I will take it as an opportunity to grow and learn from it. I will not do things that other people do just to be cool. I will do what I find interesting and socialize with people that have similar interests and have done things that I would like to learn how to do. I will think about the reason why I want to do these goals. Is it for people to admire me? Or is it because I have a dream of doing this and I’m very interested in it. I will take time to research my interests, and if I’m not very interested for the right reasons, I will just not do it.
I appreciate this talk because not only does she shed light on the reasons for our defensive failure, but offers the alternative mindsets that lead to success. At the end of the video, I'm not left wondering, "What am I going to do about it?"
Thanks for teaching people the rigth way to fail. Let the failure be your path to success. Let's fail with grace if needed be! Productive, insight-filled failures, that corrects our path and push us foward!
This was such I a good Ted talk, it made me realize my wrongs and change them into learning steps to conquer myself and drive myself to do what I want.
This talk hits the nail on the head for me👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽. Now, let me trade in defensive failure for active, action oriented failure😀😀 with a smidgen of progress thrown in over time!!!
I keep on nodding the whole time while listening to her. Seriously, i will watch this over and over again esp when i feel like taking the defensive failure path again
All who are blaming the audience (oddly 10 - 15 people) for being silent - this is most likely a post-lunch session and the hall as shown @ 5:56 is sufficiently dark to set in a drowsy mood. At least, the video got us, the virtual audience, to see & listen to this very good speaker on our own ambiance.
This is just what I needed to hear, right down to the running. I’ve started running but keep stopping, because I keep telling myself what’s the point I’m no good. So true in many areas of life
2:52 Reason 1: fixed mindset. You see failures as reasons why you aren't capable of success, so you stop trying. You don't think you can learn or improve and it's just painful to make mistakes because you feel they reveal how incompetent you are. 5:40 Reason 2: Your identity, which formed in adolescence, is at odds with your goal. 10:22 Reason 3: you don't really want to do it. you just think you should. You don't value it. there's no passion. you aren't actually interested. Distinguish intrinsic and extrinsic interests/rewards/motivators. The latter are usually not a strong enough reason to keep you going when faced with a challenge/obstacle. You need intrinsic motivation (Crowell incorrectly equates intrinsic with internal, and extrinsic with external. Surprising because she's actually a PhD psychologist. Moreover extrinsic rewards are not inherently less motivating, so don't forsake them just yet. They are just generally weaker than intrinsic motivators. But they can still be effective. E.g., all dog training is based on extrinsic motivation --- providing treats for behaviours performed.)
Doing things badly in the first few times and then witnessing yourself making progress are always much more exciting than doing it right in the first place
This was so great! I took two pages of notes. I'm in grad school and that's more notes than I take in some 3 hour lectures! So much great, well-researched, practical advice. Thank you!
Thank you for this video. Searched for a long time for a video that stood out Bc I needed someone to “talk” to. And this video spoke out the most. Thank you.
This was amazing and inspiring to watch. I am more enthused on moving my cycle of productive failure. Learning to fail forwards. Thanks, Amanda. I love your vibes and insights. This is greatly helpful for understanding myself.
I believe in myself but I am easily distracted. I can push myself physically but mentally I rather just do what's easy. Thank you for this, today I will post another RUclips video.
Thank you so much for this. I related to a lot in here, and I’ve been in a constant cycle of not being motivated enough to accomplish my goals. This gave me a lot of closure. I appreciate you.
One of the reasons that we are lazy we don't want to take initiative for any positive change. Perhaps it is deep rooted habit of our mind. Secondly we are not clear in our mind. What to do. Thirds may be we wish to many things to be done at no cost of time and hard work. It maybe in my opinion. 🙏💕
I agree. Also, we realize that good habits take a lot of work (running is harder than sitting on the couch and watching TV 😁) so, even if we can get pumped up to go for a run today, subconsciously we already look for ways to avoid future effort. It's how our brains are wired. We are creatures of comfort. One solution to that self-sabotage is to attach a very strong meaning to your goal.
Thank you for sharing your hard-won lessons with us. It resonated powerfully with me. I hope all those struggling with one or all of these mindset blocks may take one step toward the person you want to be.
This video has changed my life. I have been telling myself to work out for months now and I just found out I never wanted to do it. Fitness moves and workouts were not for me so I found out what I'm passionate about which is boxing. I did a boxing workout right after I watched this video, been trying to get out of bed for months...
An Amazing talk! The humor feels inauthentic but her words convey her message very clearly. This talk prompted me to look within myself and reflect on the half truths I've been convincing myself of. Also those hand motions are the most articulate I've ever seen. Bravo!
This might help "If the work you want to do is hard, there will be urges in the moment to quit And it is intrinsic interest that keeps you focused on the steps you need to take!🙌🏻
At this very moment, after watching this, I want to put the steps in place and start on the right path to realize my intrinsic true life fulfilling purpose HOWEVER there are so many layers (one example, every day life in 2021 living pandemic/endemic life) between clear thinking and reaching into your weary head on what you value and care for most in the world, becomes so daunting you stay paralyzed and watch videos on how to. I need a how to, how to, video.
Great speech! I really enjoy listening to TED talks. There are many inspirational stories and amazing ideas that are applicable. Thank you guys for sharing that with us! :)
Instant gratification also plays a part here, too. When the end result seems too far away, people convince themselves they aren't meant for it so they look for a quick fix and then soon feel lost all over again. Speaking from experience here.
If you believe it you can do it. Believe you can and you are half way there😌💪💪💪👍 This woman's talk is very strong and she is very funny thats why I want to watch this talk every day.
I waited 'til age 65 to exercise regularly at the gym (with a trainer....which costs). I knew that in 15 years I'd fall and break a hip if I didn't start. lol
I feel like I can’t get things done bc I have to many things to get done- but I don’t take baby steps in life which is what I’m going to work on. Thank you for a great talk.
I love this TEDTalk. It's really to the point and inspiring. How awesome it is if people believe that they will be able to achieve anything they want if they really aspire to do so!!! Thank you Amanda!
1. Afraid of failure
2. You limit yourself with "identity"
3. Secretly you don't want do it, you think you should do it
You're a hero
Thanks for saving my time
Thanks man😂
Thank you
You’re not going to get the same value if you just read this comment and don’t watch the full talk, don’t rob yourself
Instant gratification also plays a part here, too. When the end result seems too far away, people convince themselves they aren't meant for it so they look for a quick fix and then soon feel lost all over again. Speaking from experience here.
Absolutely- I agree. We need to find ways through intrinsic interest to build some gratification into it. No one stays in a slog that stays a slog for very long. Great insight.
True. But if the 'end result' is at least visible (like, it took 1700 experiments for Edison to light the bulb, but he made progress because he saw himself reaching there), it matters a lot to observe patience. If for some reason your day didn't deliver you on to the end goal, you can always see how it's is very much possible and that it is only a matter of time. You are now a step closer.
Preach brother
Before, your string of thoughts and actions would have been
'I need to do this' -> Not actually doing it -> 'I really need to do this' -> Feeling stronger resistance -> 'I need to do this no matter what' -> Feeling self-remorse
But through relaxation, your action patterns will change as the following:
'I should do this' -> Not actually doing it -> Relaxation -> Feeling lower resistance
In such a way, you break away from the pattern of increasing your level of resistance, and create an opportunity to at least begin the work you need to do.
search youtube "paradox of I can do it"
@@sarangkim6373 I absolutely love this!!
No joke, this might be the most important TED-talk of my life
I recently realised that the reason I can't achieve my dreams for years, postponing even simple steps every single day because deep inside I'm so afraid of failure. And it is just an enormous relief to know it's not just my imagination or another excuse, but there actually people like me and I honestly feel like crying as I'm typing this. Thank you so much 😭
I am so honored that it helped you like that. Thanks so much for sharing!
@@amandacrowell crying right now as well T ___ T
Same.i always thought and hated myself thinking it as excuse but others also suffer from it is my first time hearing
@@l.w.paradis2108 I understood your comment, but I too was confused seeing the word “shepherd”. I think that’s what may have come across as rude,but I know you meant well:). Have a good day.
@@MoonLight-lc8qg Okay. I give up.
Actually, I do. My deadline to emigrate is 2025.
(For future reference)
The 3 cognitive distortions :
1) 2:57 "I just can't do it! I don't have what it takes"
2) 5:50 "this is just not who I am"
3) 10:22 "I should do this, I need to do this, *but eh I don't really want to do it though* I should do it"
Solutions:
1) remind yourself that it is okay to fail. Learn from the failures and just keep swimming. Effort >>
2) find people who have the same values as you, and who found a way to make things work in a way that doesn't clash with those values. Find a way to do the things you wanna do in a way that aligns with and not clashes with your identity.
3) find your "why", the real reason why you wanna do something. It should be an intrinsic motivation and not a just superficial and external one. Remind yourself of your why to stay motivated
Thank you:)🙏🏻
Thank you!! ❤️
Thank you❤️
Thanks :)
Thank you so much this is very helpful 🙌🏻
This is me. For the last 14 years I’ve done NOTHING concerning my dreams. I have wasted my life feeling sorry for myself and living for other people. I am so tired of it I am at the point of taking all the risks to get where I want to be.
Oh my God are you writing about me...Every word fits my life..And the reason I'm a failure is I never loved myself never took care of myself, all my life spent for others, and that's what dooms you..
@@zeehuss7275 omg it’s like you two are talking about MY LIFE 😧
This is me now!!! Im 23 turning 24 in august i wish i had seen this 6-7 years ago but nobody is perfect
Go get them!
@@rakymajohnson9086 same girl
These are the kind of talks I wished we had in high school
Really Yes!!
Amen to that
Schools branched off to its main purpose
I sooo agree
Yea instead of cigarettes, once is enough
"At the heart of success is not talent. It's effort." 5:06
Excellent talk. Reason crowd seemed so quiet is bc most ppl don't like hearing the truth and she hit everything right on the head.
Would the Houston Rockets be better off without Russell Westbrook?
Or maybe they are a respectable crowd
I think it could have more to do with her beating about the bush
AGREEED
Most ted talk crowds are quiet
I love her humor and her energy. Definitely needed to hear this.
Thanks!
Fail is just an acronym
F - irst
A - ttempt
I - n
L - earning
Love that 💯
Failure is the stair to success
This is adorable! Thank you so useful!
First attempt in learning
gotta keep that in mind
Three main reason
1.deep in our mind we think we can't do it. 2. People like us dont do this because we are highly identified with a false self identity. 3.secretly we don't want it.
👍THANK YOU & BLESS YOU!!!!! 💞
@@willnicholson18 If you watch the last third of the video you'll see the stuff about the value mindset. In there, pay attention to the part about what to do if there's nothing you can do to be intrinsically interested- basically, spend some time with WHY you need to do the part you don't like. Then, when you have to sit down and do it, you can ground back into the part of you that really wants this, and stay out of the part that is doing it for extrinsic interest, which sounds like it might be part of what's tripping you up.
thank you @@amandacrowell
I love people like you. I have about 250 videos based on psychology that I have put in a playlist and this cuts down the time it takes it to go through them significantly.
Every points are damn correct for me . I don't know what will I do in life ?
1. Shift your mindset from, "belief that some people have it and you don't," to "your rookie mistakes are just sign paths on the way to success."
2. Shift your mindset from, "People like you (i.e. your identity) don't do things like this," (and therefore you push hard against such behavior), to finding people who do things you want to do and mimmick them.
3. Shift your mindset from, "secretly you don't want to do it, you just think you SHOULD do it because the people you emulate to do it," to drawing a straight bright-line from your long-term dreams (e.g. buying a house, sitting with your children by a crackling fire) to the desired behavior instead of motivation such as becoming a wealthy, admired, 'cool' person.
**If the work you want to do is hard, there WILL be urges in the moment to quit, and it is INTRINSIC INTEREST that keeps you focused on the actions you need to take. You have to build out the INTRINSIC INTEREST.**
Why we don’t do what we say we’ll do:
1. We get lost, distracted, or addicted to what’s more “pleasurable” or “comfortable” than what is important
2. We see “pain” in exerting the effort or we lack the energy required to do the important thing.
3. We don’t care because its not killing us anyway...not yet.
Mama Mia! Between Amanda's video and Bong Pal's comments lie the pathway to success! That's if one is willing to apply the wisdom therein.
I still come back to this EVERY time :(
No truer and wiser words were ever said..
Here am i....
@@blueeloop we change once we “decide” to change. And ultimately we decide to change because of inspiration or “desperation.” In my experience, profound desperation is the more powerful emotion for change or action. All the best in your journey.
It is so satisfying to watch knowing that you are not alone. It's actually happens to everyone and it's perfectly normal.
Thanks to Amanda Crowell for this inspiring talk. And also… for making me understand that “heart-centred, helper type, non competitive” people exist and can be successful in this world. Good luck to everybody who’s struggling.
I appreciate with whole my heart the person who funded Tedx talk. I have learned so many things through this stage. The people who deliver speeches the deliver the nectar of their experiences. I am so glad we have tedx talks in RUclips.
The most empowering ted talk clear and well structured
Thank you! I'm glad you found it empowering!!
That is true!
@@amandacrowell Sincerely the best and most rewarding
Watched this for the first time in the first week of january. I'll keep coming back every time I lose my motivation. This helps me a lot.
2-02/21/22
haha seriously?
@@imgoingplacestoday no
“To the ones who are there for me & who always have my back…… everything you are to me is everything I lack.” - BM
TeamWork and finding the right ones to surround yourself with is major also because misery loves company and they’ll continue to feed your appetite of self gratification with false hope and accomplishments. Keep striving for greatness & stop settling for less than you deserve.
This is spot-on.. I didn't even know I was doing this! My dream is to become a musical theatre actress and although I am taking singing lessons, I always stop myself and think that I don't have what is required and that I have too little experience. Maybe I should, instead of procrastinating and whining, go out and GET experience, despite my brain telling me to stay home
Ginger Rose YES!!! You got this.
Community theatres are usually pretty welcoming. That'd be a great way to get experience. 🖤
3 reasons you arent doing what u say you will do... Wow i really need this *save to watch latter*
😂
Did that with the procrastination video
Thats really funny.
Same but I actually got back to it :)
I did this so many times,but i come back to it
Its amazing how these 17 minutes have more valuable lessons than I would ever come across in my life
"People like you don't do things like this.."
This hits soo hard-😢
"We can be anything we want, if we get our head clear and we begin to take steps. And if you're doing those two things, nothing can stop you." 🔥
Amanda, when you get to read this comment: Thank you for articulating the hidden intricacies that have been holding me back. Knowing that I am not the only one definitely helps. What is helping me even more is the realization of being defensive about my failure.
Thank you so much for sharing your reaction!
So the audience aren't good because: 1) Secretly they don't believe they can be a good audience 2) They don't think they are like people that can be a good audience 3)Being a good audience doesn't interest them enough, if they're honest
🤣🤣🤣
I see what you did there 😏👏🏾👏🏾
HAHAHAHHA
this is now my favorite ted-talk. sometimes i have dreams, sometimes none. it's confusing when you don't have a strong grip of who you actually are and who you actually want to be. because you often mistook it for who people expect you to be.
Yes! It takes practice to learn to hear your own truth and then believe what you hear
@@amandacrowellomg it's an honor!! but yes indeed! i started assuring myself that "as long as i believe in myself", i can make through whatever. of course i still am hesitant and anxious from time to time but ted talks and their wise speakers such as you really do help people (especially me) arrange their perspectives in a better lighting. so thank you sincerely.
i am just a stranger but i am rooting for you and everyone else in their own journey. Fighting!
One reason I found social media such as RUclips and Instagram to be useful is that it exposed me to examples of success in fields I’m interested in who look like me or had similar circumstances to me which would’ve been hard to find otherwise in my small town and small circle of friends.
I watched this because I am keep saying that I will learn programming, tomorrow - next week - next weekend - next holiday and so on.
I will write all the reasons why I want to learn programming and remind myself all the time when I need to.
Thank you.
Once you have successfully managed to overcome these cognitive distorsions, something interesting happens to you.
When you go off the beaten track and know deep in your gut that it's the right way to go, you will have to face criticism from people who claim to know better than you.
Well, never ever listen to those who say you can not do it. Do what your heart says is right. Some people desperately want others to fail to feel better about themselves. You are not the problem, they are. You don't owe them anything.
Instead, you should embrace your uniqueness and reach the dreams that you so desperately want to reach because you DESERVE to live a happy life. Always remember that we were born here on Earth to feel joy.
Yes, the grind can be strenuous but your future self is there already thanking you for all the efforts you've put into reaching your goals. And I along many other people will be there, standing in awe over what you have accomplished to change your life for the better.
Love this comment section, most of us are in the right spot and needed to hear this!
I have been good at things from the jump for most of my life..... But since 2020, I am trying to do something I'm not good at and the fear of failure or rejection from failing is very tough to acknowlege and deal with. It's silly but it's real.
Amanda Crowell, that was a great talk. Thank you. Sorry your audience was so flat.
I've been having issues with procrastination, even though I've been an achiever...PhD scientist and composer, and a seeker of what is this life. My hunch is that grief, as well as your 3 potent points, is at the heart. I am going to focus on what you taught.
Also,
I've been geeking out on a wonderful podcast series by Stanford neurobiologist prof, Andrew Huberman. He spoke of the mindset research also
I think these things a lot. It holds me back. The fear of failure or that it isn't me or isn't meant for me is just all in the mind. Why do we do these things to hold ourselves back? Little by little, we could be anywhere we wanted just by taking the simple steps and allowing ourselves to fail and to learn and to grow.
The talk that reveals the actual reasons why we procrastinate or avoid doing things that are important for our GROWTH. This is one of the best TED Talks I have watched. I can't thank her and TED enough for bringing this to me... This is exactly what I needed to cure myself of procrastination... I am so grateful to TED and Amanda Crowell
I'm so glad it resonated!
This was a very good Ted talk. I always have struggled to keep up with goals. Now that I’ve gotten good advice I’m going to write down the steps I will take to accomplish my goals. I will allow myself to try what I want to do, and not be afraid of failure. I will take it as an opportunity to grow and learn from it. I will not do things that other people do just to be cool. I will do what I find interesting and socialize with people that have similar interests and have done things that I would like to learn how to do. I will think about the reason why I want to do these goals. Is it for people to admire me? Or is it because I have a dream of doing this and I’m very interested in it. I will take time to research my interests, and if I’m not very interested for the right reasons, I will just not do it.
I appreciate this talk because not only does she shed light on the reasons for our defensive failure, but offers the alternative mindsets that lead to success. At the end of the video, I'm not left wondering, "What am I going to do about it?"
I’m so glad it resonated with you!
Thanks for teaching people the rigth way to fail. Let the failure be your path to success. Let's fail with grace if needed be! Productive, insight-filled failures, that corrects our path and push us foward!
I’m so glad it resonated with you!
Amanda Crowell... YOU ROCK!! I have now looked for and found my intrinsic interest. Thank you 👍🏼 😊
Great!! I’m glad it helped you
This was such I a good Ted talk, it made me realize my wrongs and change them into learning steps to conquer myself and drive myself to do what I want.
I got here with no expectations are at all and it turned out to be one of the best talks I've ever seen.
hooray! I'm so glad!
Watching this at 5.00 and about to cry. This is me right now. I want to change mindset and my life
This talk hits the nail on the head for me👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽👏🏽. Now, let me trade in defensive failure for active, action oriented failure😀😀 with a smidgen of progress thrown in over time!!!
Yes! Agreed!
🦋that’s why it’s so important to make yourself proud, if you look at yourself in disgust change it
Wow wow tough crowd - this woman is funny af and no ones bitting
Thank you! I felt that way watching it, too, but there was more laughter in real life than comes through in the video, thank goodness. :)
I have been thinking the same and am relieved, that people really did have fun. :)
i love her personality😊🎆!
Actually, I think they are silent because the message is penetrating them. They are totally engaged in self-reflection. That is super.
Totally
😂💔
She definetely deserved a better audience! Such an inspiring and motivating lecture, it really touched me!
I keep on nodding the whole time while listening to her. Seriously, i will watch this over and over again esp when i feel like taking the defensive failure path again
Is defensive failure really laziness?
@@ejaws1720 No, it's not! In fact, calling it laziness is how we overwhelm ourselves so we don't have to take action.
Thank you! I'm glad it was helpful!
All who are blaming the audience (oddly 10 - 15 people) for being silent - this is most likely a post-lunch session and the hall as shown @ 5:56 is sufficiently dark to set in a drowsy mood. At least, the video got us, the virtual audience, to see & listen to this very good speaker on our own ambiance.
This is just what I needed to hear, right down to the running. I’ve started running but keep stopping, because I keep telling myself what’s the point I’m no good. So true in many areas of life
Yes! Now you can tell yourself, the point is that "I'm not good yet, but I'm better than yesterday!" And just keep going. I'm glad it helped.
2:52
Reason 1: fixed mindset. You see failures as reasons why you aren't capable of success, so you stop trying. You don't think you can learn or improve and it's just painful to make mistakes because you feel they reveal how incompetent you are.
5:40
Reason 2: Your identity, which formed in adolescence, is at odds with your goal.
10:22
Reason 3: you don't really want to do it. you just think you should. You don't value it. there's no passion. you aren't actually interested. Distinguish intrinsic and extrinsic interests/rewards/motivators. The latter are usually not a strong enough reason to keep you going when faced with a challenge/obstacle. You need intrinsic motivation (Crowell incorrectly equates intrinsic with internal, and extrinsic with external. Surprising because she's actually a PhD psychologist. Moreover extrinsic rewards are not inherently less motivating, so don't forsake them just yet. They are just generally weaker than intrinsic motivators. But they can still be effective. E.g., all dog training is based on extrinsic motivation --- providing treats for behaviours performed.)
Doing things badly in the first few times and then witnessing yourself making progress are always much more exciting than doing it right in the first place
I wish I could give this a million thumbs up. Hands down the best Ted Talk I've ever heard. Thank you!
I feel all of them! Thank you!
Exactly what I need today. It talks the reality of me.
This is the bestest n the most important TEDx talks I've ever seen.
1 defensive failure, Carol dweck growth mindset
2 identity fracturing, Erik Erickson
Do identity cohesion
3 no intrinsic value
this is the most important video that i've ever watch in my entire life
thankyou very much for this, i really mean it
thankyou
🙏
This was so great! I took two pages of notes. I'm in grad school and that's more notes than I take in some 3 hour lectures! So much great, well-researched, practical advice. Thank you!
Thank you! I'm so glad it resonated with you!
Can you share your notes? Haha
Thank you for this video. Searched for a long time for a video that stood out Bc I needed someone to “talk” to. And this video spoke out the most. Thank you.
One of the best, eye opening, amazing talk I heard and loved and was engaged throughout in listening!
This was amazing and inspiring to watch.
I am more enthused on moving my cycle of productive failure.
Learning to fail forwards.
Thanks, Amanda. I love your vibes and insights.
This is greatly helpful for understanding myself.
I believe in myself but I am easily distracted. I can push myself physically but mentally I rather just do what's easy. Thank you for this, today I will post another RUclips video.
i agree with everything here, i totally felt many of the negative things in here. thankfully i'm not completely worthless and willing to do things
I love you - you are so wonderful, your kids are thankful to have you as a mom. so helpful ! !
hellowhatup awwwww... Thanks!!
Thank you so much for this. I related to a lot in here, and I’ve been in a constant cycle of not being motivated enough to accomplish my goals. This gave me a lot of closure. I appreciate you.
One of the reasons that we are lazy we don't want to take initiative for any positive change. Perhaps it is deep rooted habit of our mind. Secondly we are not clear in our mind. What to do. Thirds may be we wish to many things to be done at no cost of time and hard work. It maybe in my opinion. 🙏💕
I agree. Also, we realize that good habits take a lot of work (running is harder than sitting on the couch and watching TV 😁) so, even if we can get pumped up to go for a run today, subconsciously we already look for ways to avoid future effort. It's how our brains are wired. We are creatures of comfort.
One solution to that self-sabotage is to attach a very strong meaning to your goal.
I thought these were the things she was gonna say... 😊
Thank you for sharing your hard-won lessons with us. It resonated powerfully with me. I hope all those struggling with one or all of these mindset blocks may take one step toward the person you want to be.
The best Ted talk i ever watched !!
She answered a lot of my questions which helped a lot
This is the best Ted Talk I've listened to.
Is audience alive? `~`
The speaker is so funny and smart. Great talk!
Thank you! I appreciate it!
Maybe it was a sparse Covid audience....of accountants and engineers!😅
there is no audience mic
You gotta know Harrisburg... I agree, Great talk Amanda
Helpful (and I like to exercise)!
Times change though and various mindsets, begin to limit you, if you don't keep mindful 👁️
Truly a lot of the Tedx talks have been so much better than the actual Ted talks lately. Good vod!
One of the best talks I've ever listened to!
Thank you so much!
The candy crush joke was brilliant as was the rest of her talk. How was there not more laughter...?
Thank you!
This video has changed my life. I have been telling myself to work out for months now and I just found out I never wanted to do it. Fitness moves and workouts were not for me so I found out what I'm passionate about which is boxing. I did a boxing workout right after I watched this video, been trying to get out of bed for months...
I'm so glad it helped you!
This crowd. Were they summoned here for jury duty?
🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂
😝
Haaaaaaaaaaaaaa!!!! 😅😅😅
Lol
I thought about this. But when I read a comment from her that the audience were laughing but it didn't make it in the video
Amanda has an amazing personality and loved her body language. I would recommend her to the middle school my daughter goes to. Great job❤
An Amazing talk! The humor feels inauthentic but her words convey her message very clearly. This talk prompted me to look within myself and reflect on the half truths I've been convincing myself of. Also those hand motions are the most articulate I've ever seen. Bravo!
Just oration wise she is my favorite ever ted speaker!!!
Thank you! I appreciate that.
This might help "If the work you want to do is hard, there will be urges in the moment to quit And it is intrinsic interest that keeps you focused on the steps you need to take!🙌🏻
The Ted Talk I needed... thank you, Professor! I'll watch it on loop.
I'm glad it helped!
At this very moment, after watching this, I want to put the steps in place and start on the right path to realize my intrinsic true life fulfilling purpose HOWEVER there are so many layers (one example, every day life in 2021 living pandemic/endemic life) between clear thinking and reaching into your weary head on what you value and care for most in the world, becomes so daunting you stay paralyzed and watch videos on how to. I need a how to, how to, video.
I just wrote the companion book, so I hope it will help! It's coming this Spring. 💙
@@amandacrowell That's great! I'll def check it out!
Action driven progress...life gets better.
Great speech! I really enjoy listening to TED talks. There are many inspirational stories and amazing ideas that are applicable. Thank you guys for sharing that with us! :)
Wht a beautiful woman she is ! How happy she was telling tht she is able to pick up her son now. SO pure.
just loved her attitude and confidence 👏👏 well done girl 👍
Anmol Behal thank you!!!!
Instant gratification also plays a part here, too. When the end result seems too far away, people convince themselves they aren't meant for it so they look for a quick fix and then soon feel lost all over again. Speaking from experience here.
This Ted Talk is really great. And If I start doing what I wanted to do from years, I'll come back here.
If you believe it you can do it.
Believe you can and you are half way there😌💪💪💪👍
This woman's talk is very strong and she is very funny thats why I want to watch this talk every day.
She is wonderful. Her voice draws your attention. Great information!
One of the BEST Ted Talks! Just WOW!!
This TED-talk was an eye-opener for me.
I waited 'til age 65 to exercise regularly at the gym (with a trainer....which costs). I knew that in 15 years I'd fall and break a hip if I didn't start. lol
I'm considering making a list of the reasons why I'm trying to pursue my current goals to counteract defensive failure, and to be a reminder for me
I’m glad I have this in middle school, because some people don’t have these resources.
I feel like I can’t get things done bc I have to many things to get done- but I don’t take baby steps in life which is what I’m going to work on. Thank you for a great talk.
I love this TEDTalk. It's really to the point and inspiring. How awesome it is if people believe that they will be able to achieve anything they want if they really aspire to do so!!! Thank you Amanda!
Thank you so much!!
She read me without even seeing me. Great talk ! Really helped me.
Your talk hits the nail on the head for me in regards to motivation. It is worth of listening multiple times!
Thank you so much!! I so appreciate that!
One of the best Ted talk I have watched !
Hands down the best talk I have ever listened to and was so so so so much relatable.
Thank you so much for this talk. Inspiring
she is so brave and has a powerful personality,
I guess this is a unique type of beauty.
Thanks, friend.