That banner image at the top of your page here is highly misleading. It implies this is the place to come to get celebrity interviews. Anyone who's still subscribed now knows that this is now the place to come for shock docs telling you unless you change everything in your life you'll be dead in no time at all. Only 1 out of the last 20 videos here was anyone you'd vaguely call a celeb, and he's only a youtuber. UNSUBSCRIBED !!
Im looking for the poem that a guest (if it’s not Adam)?shared about “isn’t doing it"… ie: making a list is not doing it…announcing you’re going to do it is not doing it…Was it Adam or a different guest?
As somebody who suffers from lots of imposter thoughts, I really appreciated the idea that if a handful or more people believe in you, we should believe them. I will try to remember that as much as possible going forward
Man, I really Iike this guy. A psychologist and neuroscientist here. I will be reading his books from now on. Really enjoy content Ike this. Thank you Stephen. I love DOAC and I get so much out of your channel.
Successful people don't become that way overnight. most people see at a glance-wealth, a great career, purpose-is the result of hard work and hustle over time. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life, 🙏🙏🙏
Starting early is the best way of getting ahead to build wealth, investing remains a priority. I learnt from my last year's experience, i am able to build a suitable life because I invested early ahead this time
I urge everyone to start somewhere now no matter how small, this is literally the time for that, forget material things, don't get tempted,i became more better the moment i realized this.
yeah investment is the key to sustaining your financial longevity but venturing into any legitimate Investment without a proper guidance of an expert can lead to a great loss too
Didn’t we celebrate 4M subscribers two seconds ago? I blinked and we’ve hit 5M! So proud to be part of this family ❤ thank you for bringing incredible content every episode
@@indochinaconnex4308 I hope you heal from whatever hurt you. There’s no need to be nasty. The video was released 12 days ago and has 250K views which is incredible because it will continue to reach audiences as the days and months go by. Thanks for the engagement, you’re helping the channel 🤩🤩🤩🤩
The insights on procrastination were spot on! For entrepreneurs, it's crucial to break tasks into smaller steps and set specific deadlines for each. This approach reduces the overwhelm and makes it easier to start, which is often the hardest part.
Break tasks into smaller steps and set specific deadlines for each. Break tasks into smaller steps and set specific deadlines for each. Break tasks into smaller steps and set specific deadlines for each. Plain and simple but oh so effective. I have set a reminder on my phone to remind me this every day . Thank you☺
@TheDiaryOfACEO Steven, there are so many famous/popular podcasters around but you are truly one of the best, if not the best I've come across. You allow your guests to speak without interrupting and ask intelligent questions at the right moment. Kudos and thanks for the great content. Really look forward to your podcasts.
As the oldest of four, I've always felt like the "cowcatcher" of the family, the first to try and experience EVERYTHING, and to pass down to the others what I learned so they wouldn't make the same mistakes I made because I just didn't know going in.
@@123shotassame, the eldest in mine follows others blindly, doesn't question... often stuck with quite bizarre way of thinking without backed rationales
Adam Grant has a resting smiley face. Love listening to him but looking at his face light up every time he cites his sources gives me even greater joy 😀
I think when you’re describing moderate or effective procrastination, it’s really what I think of as a “brain break”. If you keep pushing at something when you’re stuck, or tired, you won’t make progress in a positive direction. But, if you give yourself a “brain break”, you come back to it with some “fresh-ness”.
After listening to Adam's discussion on disagreeable givers, I had a moment of clarity realizing that I fall into that category. Despite my genuine care for others and my proactive nature in wanting to assist them, I often find myself labeled as negative when I take initiative to rectify injustices or make positive changes. This insight has been invaluable in helping me understand myself better, acknowledging the complexity of my character and motivations. Thanks Adam!
That "you're negative" comment is BS, it takes awareness and insight to identify issues and takes TRUE positivity to improve the issue. Its a complete inversion of reality but its the prevailing perception and you have to find a balance or just be around folks that get it.
I have never considered mulling over a problem as procrastination. In the sewing community, when we come to a point where we are stuck or the project isn’t come out the way we envisioned, we put the project in a corner somewhere and come back to it at some point in the future, often reimagined.
Dreams are a huge help to me. I solve problems and conceive new ideas while I sleep. I find it saves time because I'm working and sleeping at the same time. The saved time gets used to implement ideas or to move ahead past where I was stuck.
I think risk taking can also be the result of being inexperienced and or younger, resulting in a kind of naive risk taking where you are unaware of the actual magnitude of the actual risk. Not knowing what you don't know. Risk taking can also be a result of desperation. Not just being desperate, but also having the kind of temperament that is good at innovating and "thinking outside the box", by people who naturally have a non conventional way of looking at a problem. A solution may seem to be riskier to others. because it's not familiar and not the conventional way of doing the thing. Wow, I followed you right down that rabbit hole. Thanks for the fun!
Would like to know more about "only children" as an only child. A professor and a writer. I wrote my first book in 6 months, but have been writing my second novel over 14 years. A combination of trying to write a sequel and standalone book that does have significantly better writing, but because of several personal losses (my mother's death, a direct hit by Cat 5 hurricane, and trauma at work), has meant disruptions to the creative progress and a nasty case of writer's block has made it feel like a Herculean task. I am going to finish this book because it drives me nuts leaving something so important to me uncompleted, but the anxiety, fear of failure, and self doubt have to go. Nothing is perfect and I have to give myself grace to finish the novel.
When he said “if you have techniques for making discomfort less uncomfortable or if you know how to get comfortable being uncomfortable” my mind went 🤯🤯🤯 OMG!!! Huge nugget of perspective!!
Omgggg yessss Adam Grant ❤❤❤ “You build your confidence by taking the leap 🙌 you become ready by putting yourself in situation that you don’t think you can excel at yet.” Huge fan of your books. I love how open you are about your experiences with diving and the kind of fear you’ve faced. Hearing about this from my hero gives me courage to have a bit more faith in myself to go outside of my comfort zone and try the things I’ve always said I wanted to do. thanks for another great interview Steven!!
Another possible theory regarding birth order could be that younger children experience more authority with older siblings and parents and look to "rebel" a bit more. Fantastic talk!
Great guest, a pleasure to listen to him. Clear, Funny, positive, knowledgeable, well spoken - sets the standard for other speakers and you can see this in the cute spontaneous interactions as well
Dear Stephen, Before I discovered your channel, I had been thinking that CEOs must be inhumane, not necessarily because of their nature, but because you have to make so many difficult decisions that you become kind of desensitized. Also, power and money can spoil even the best people. You have, however, have shattered my illusions about that. You're always so compassionate and supporting, it's just a joy to see. Thank you.
Next week - how siblings outperform the first born . Week after that - how only child’s are child prodigies , & the week after that how’s its really better to not be born at all .
This channel was on 400,000 subs when I subscribed. Absolutely blew up. These conversations have helped me grow in so many ways as I know they will have in soooo many people. So I just wanted to say thank you to Steven and the DOAC team!! 💙🙌 x
100% true that most leaders are surrounded by “yes” people who never challenge them. I Love that Adam points this out and encourages challenge networks. Brilliant!! Fantastic interview!! 👏🏼👏🏼
I’m a painter and have never believed in “creative blocks.” I’ve always incorporated what I called productive procrastination into my painting practice.
I'm listening to this and I'm 21:20 mins into it, and can relate to ALL of it. From procrastination to using Google and questioning the status quo. Had to stop to write this so I can focus on the remainder of the talk.
This guy was so good! He’s got an incongruity in his face? He does have a kind of friendly (goofy) muppet’s? face, but when he stops talking, your side angles as he’s listening shows a searing intelligence in those eyes! He’s very intelligent and I can imagine on sight, it’s not immediately apparent! Those ice breakers he mentioned would really work for him!
Three important takeaways I often forget to live by: 1. Use skill power, not willpower: My gloss on this is that deferring gratification is more about developing skills to make doing the right things easier. For instance, engineer your environment to (a) add friction to starting time-wasting activities and (b) minimize distractions. 2. Know how good is good enough for the task at hand. Your time is limited and must be allocated across different projects. Where will additional effort or quality yield the highest long-term ROI? A perfectionist mindset is often a poor investment of time and effort. 3. Everyone has different life experiences and something to teach you if you're prepared to listen and learn.
* I don't really blame people who panic. Lack of information can be a big hurdle. I've been making more than $21k passively by just investing through an advisor, and I don't have to do much work. Inflation or no inflation, my finances remain secure. So I really don't blame people who panic.
Among other things, this inspired me to ask a few former staff, colleagues, and supervisors for input & advice about our time working together. New leadership level unlocked! Thank you! 🙏🏻
I did not realize the potential that I had until I took risks and faced my fears. Now I feel wonderful because I was bold and passionate. I was not afraid of failure. Only my uncle believed in me and my talent. I did not know that had had it😂
Ronaldo’s style of play may invite debate, it’s undeniable that his presence elevates the performance of those around him and contributes to the overall success of his team. In the end, the true measure of his teamwork lies not only in statistics but also in the tangible impact he has on his teammates and the team’s achievements!
stats to do not say that about Ronaldo in particular.... do your research@@chrisgault87 . Every team he has been in has gotten better and won more trophies.... except when ten hag was there. that guy was the problem. look at his team now
The thing with Ronaldo is that he played in one of the greatest teams of all time at Real Madrid where he won everything multiple times. Going to Juventus and and Manchester United (which are World famous clubs and have had past success) is a downgrade not only in skill but in mentality. The guy is a born winner and is the most competitive person around and expects his team to deliver for him( because he scores the goals) He can become easily frustrated when things don’t go his way which I guess can cause tension within a team setting. Side note: CR7 and LM10 play in different positions and have different styles, let’s just appreciate that we had this time to enjoy the 2 best players around at the same time.
This 2% number is entirely based on your definition of success! By my definition, good quality of life and relationships, most people are successful!!!
Shouldn't have used an inaccurate statement about Ronaldo's game. One of the things the athlete is lauded for is how he raises the level of every team he has played at. Entire teams player at a higher level collectively when he joins them. This is well documented. You can be a focal point for the attack of a team and simultaneously elevate each and every attribute of the entire team when you are the type of athlete that he is.
I comment and like for the algorithm, so that more people listen this great conversation!!! I enjoyed it so much and learned so much! It was entertaining and light-hearted as well, with the jokes in between. Thank you Adam & Steven! 🙏
Hi, I am Bindi from india living in Australia english is not my language but still I love your chanel very slow way I ma listening this broadcast many time pose because understand with my google translation then again catinew write some note, I really liked it I can understand How much Hard work behind the one broadcast..... thanks my wishes and blessing always your broadcast will be Hit yes I Hit the button and subscribe button as well because your promises it will be worth it 🎉🎉🎉🎉
I love Adam! He doesn't know it but man the impact he had on my view of self and society has been phenomenal ever since I read Originals. He's one of those people that you just want to absorb every single word they say! Thank you, Steven and The DOAC team, for inviting him over! 💙
Thank you so much. Your questions are perfectly aimed, you lead the interview in a way that the listener can follow & builds the concept & makes sense. You're a good listener. Straight thinking. I appreciate it!
I'm a proscatinador who in addittion is very hard on himself... I am a reseacher so for me, everything is a project; at work and in life. Your concept about procastrination made me realize my procastination is not me sabotaging his flow. My procrastrination is indeed me planning, me researching. In many cases my procastrination is my analisis, my planning phase ;). Great invite, very nice epidosie. Thanks!
Video games, like most things we use, have different effects depending on how we use them. I don’t know which research he is referring to, but not being able to stop playing is the opposite of discipline, for example. And that I have seen a lot of when it comes to video game use. I have even seen it go as far as kids (and grownups) becoming antisocial because their main focus was video games. Another thing is that skills learned within a virtual environment don’t necessarily translate to real life. And then there is the specific motivation that drives kids wanting to play video games because it provokes a chemical drive and reward cycle that is not easily found in real life, and that is considered dangerous because it is addictive. I therefore sincerely doubt that the benefits outway the bad sides.
Games have always had a dopamine cycle that has potential dangers. One counter argument is kids learning destructive real world behaviours to derive dopamine in similar fashion (one particularly stupid way for slightly older kids in my area was jumping off bridges). There is a stronger argument than ever against videogames as many of the mainstream games have been optimised to provide unhealthy reward loops with less difficulty. This on top of predatory gambling mechanics can really damage brains at a young age.
Shame the Renaldo comments have masked the rest of this interview & turned some off - his comments on perfection & aiming for 10 are very useful in life…
My three sons got scholarships. They had to maintain good grades to keep the scholarships. Graduated out of two of the best schools in my state. My father was one of eight siblings. All very smart.
It's again much about good old PARETO principle - on return on invested affects and on how much the specific topic or achievement matters at all, depending on context ofc.
This is an amazing interview ❤. Adam, Steven; thank you! I’m not even done listening and I had to stop to comment (@1:12). I could write a few paragraphs on the learning. Going to have to listen again for sure 👍🏾.
I really loved this episode. I learned so much from the both of you. Just stumbled upon this podcast not so long ago and you share so many interesting people and topics work us! Thank you!
20:00 firefox better performers they stick longer 33:45 skills to choose such as endurance for getting out of comfort zone 52:00 everyone can be your teacher 1:23:00 seek teir advice and make them coaches 1:28:50 1:30:40 1:34:30 values vs beliefs identity, sense of self
Regarding the conversation about sports (Ronaldo) - those who are interested might find Malcom Gladwell's work comparing basketball to other types of sports valuable. To paraphrase, certain types of sports require a team of multiple good players to be exceptions. For the other class of sports, like basketball, teams can win games if most of their players are just okay, as long as there is 1 or a few superstars. This is to say - the way you can improve your team is different across contexts.
Mega interesting. Some points that resonates: The perceived tension between loyalty and honesty. Brainstorming vs Brainwriting. Pairing people to promote anonymity. Getting it right vs being right. Knowing what you are bad at. The importance of a Challenge Network. Being a more agreeable disagreeable giver :). And so forth. So many valuable thoughts. Thank you.
Google for email or browser is a hard no for some people, and it isn’t because we aren’t creative. Depends on what people believe about digital narrative and manipulation of the public thoughtform. Other than that - super edifying to listen. Grateful. Cheers!
Yeah it's hard to find a more simplified analysis I hope to hear better in the rest of the vid. It's like saying people who go more to the restaurant have more culinary taste. What about finances?
It is only logical that a player like Ronaldo would have such an effect on a team, especially post 2017, because he assumed the role of strict poacher. A poacher in any team is expected to be demanding of the ball, and selfish with finishing. That's the whole point. It is important to note that this observation should be restricted to his plays post 2017 RM only. Additionally, this has been a problem with other stars like MJ or Kobe in Basketball. Even Messi for that matter has a net negative impact on the defensive side of the team. But you don't play Messi because he can defend, or Ronaldo for he can play second balls. Their movements and timings, rising to the occasion, handling pressure, leading from the front, and the unbridled magical footballing ability is what makes these players indispensable. That is why teams are often created around these players. Barca around Messi and RM around Cristiano. No team without such a balance would win CL. PSG and Juve clearly failed to create such a balance. This is by no means a criticism of Ronaldo.
You dont need to critizise yourself to have a group that speaks their mind. You need to support an openess without prestige, leave your ego at the door, focus on making every member the best they can be, train them and challenge them at their level
My older siblings are definitely not smarter…they’re a mess and we two younger siblings are sorting out their mess…procrastination is their middle name….but still I love them dearly 😌
Fascinating.. my son (take it from my previous comment) got hooked on the games and we couldn’t do anything to take him away from gaming.. I wanted him to go outside in the nature more and play with other kids but he get’s depressed and frustrated how we handled him that way. But thru all that.. he excelled in school.. first honors and sums cum laude in college. And till to this day, he is competing in games all over the place. And I also know someone who is older than my son and had this Nintendo in his hands every time we see his family.. then now, he makes his money from technologies and got his own website and up and running.. traveling the world and get to taste the lavish lifestyle of a millionaire.. 😊
Not only am I the youngest in the family. But I am the youngest among all my cousins. And have the most degrees and the most ‘successful’ in every. And I mean every. Aspect of life.
Im intrigued by the audacity you've blatantly inbedded *amongst the plethora of grammatical errors used to advertise your superiority. Your cousins must be jealous.
Middle child here 🙋♀️ My upbringing was very different from the norm (perhaps this had an influence on the outcome). I score higher than both my sisters for both IQ and GAI, I was accelerated to my older sister’s schooling level at age 8, I learnt to read and write faster, had more natural proficiency for music (they both quit after a few years, so no knowing how it would’ve turned out if they continued), and my family consider me to be the most successful. In other words, if you are an older sibling watching this, don’t be too quick to jump on your high horse.
So freaking funny point about choice of browsers. I have a MacBook with parallels for Windows/Work...I use multiple browsers - Safari for entertainment (AppleTV, Netflix and RUclips - where I watch DOAC :) ) Chrome for research and browser based applications; IE or Edge for "work" browsing....lol
For the brainstorming, when I was doing game jams I used a digital whiteboard and asked people to pick any corner and write down all ideas they could think of, and then we could discuss it later/the day after. It was relatively anonymous. It made even introverts get some space to present their ideas :D
PRESSURE is how you know your team is effective or not. Those who are about the ALL will adapt and find a way to win together. Those who are about themselves, will compete and create unnecessary conflicts to mitigate, wasting energy, resources, and valuable time to adapt.
Soooo what happens to the middle children? I'm No.6 of 9. I actually feel like my younger siblings are way less risk takers. Really loved this episode. Very interesting information surrounding procrastination. For some things in my life, I fall under the procrastinator that procrastinates too long out of fear and then never accomplish certain things. But, hopefully will be able to change this about myself.
Are you going to make that jump eventually ? "ya sure" then what are you waiting for ? - If you identify yourself as your beliefs than you won't see the truth that will allow you to honour your values(what's more important to you, vs what you think is true) - Ask your critics for advice so they can become your coach.
I was the third born of three sons in the family. All that they said is true. BUT I believe that parents are obsessed with being the PERFECT parent and doing everything they could to focus on this kid. They wanted a second child, but had a difficult time getting and staying pregnant - so that kid was born 10 years after the first. BUT then - three years after the success of the second you hear the words - "What do you mean I'm pregnant ? ! ? !" The first two did scouts, swimming lessons, etc. The surprise baby had none of that. I don't feel cheated or not loved, but I had to forage for myself and make anything I had on my own. I don't thing they didn't want me, but quite frankly - I think after putting all that energy into the first two - they were exhausted and just over it by the time it came to be my turn. The oldest had a moderately successful life. The middle was a disaster that literally has always lived in a trailer part. And I've traveled the world, own two posh homes and owned a very successful business most of my adult life.
Wait, video games may not be the devil but compounded with social media and this idea that you need to live on the net is definitely impacting the social thread in society.
@@11235butI had to be when younger ( oldest of 4) by virtue of age. But boy did my 3 younger sibs become more successful than me! And I prob “ did” get the best genes from my parents ( thinking that’s how nature worked) but I blew it, compared to them. They all worked harder.
25:46 Loved this episode with Adam Grant. The understanding of perfectionism was really helpful to me. If I hadn't addressed my real struggle with perfectionism, I wouldn't take the risks that I have in my career. Imperfection still brings me anxiety. It's hard wired and a continuous process.
@TheDiaryOfACEO Adam did briefly mention survivorship bias a bit before talking about how surviving uncomfortable positions increases tolerance to discomfort. I wish he'd gone more into the way that the trauma for some does lead to heightened anxiety for risk taking because when a person lacks privilege they often can not afford risk. Adam only very briefly mentions the marshmallow study, and it seems important to expand more on aspects of privilege in relation to repeated trauma. When you've experienced the bad things over and over, you might just try to cope by attempting to not end up back there, rather than pursuing your full potential, or you might lack the energy for pursuit. That seems like it could indicate some difference between trauma or even capital T Trauma, versus repeated capital T Trauma, which can cause changes in the brain and body that are permanent or more difficult to overcome. There's probably an unknown bell curve formula of amount of trauma combined with privilege that a person is able to have before the effects are more negative than positive. I feel both motivated and dejected by this talk, because I recognize in myself the natural capacity for many of the qualities Adam points to in originals, but I started in poverty, never got out of poverty, and I've lost more than one job for too openly questioning authority because something they suggested didn't even make sense by their own purported morals and goals. At this point, I'm 31 years old and experiencing burnout so badly that my psychiatrist thinks I actually have undiagnosed autism, so I'm on a waitlist for testing, while the symptoms have already become fairly disabling from the toll of pushing myself for 31 years. Elon Musk, who also exhibits obvious signs of autism, some of which correlate to Adam's concept of an original, never had to deal with poverty or an abusive mother with schizophrenia or any of the other numerous challenges in my life that I'm not going to waste space listing. Elon Musk is a rich man, and I'm a poor woman, who has experience with being disliked by the financially secure men above me. My own resilience leads me to the hope that I can get back in the game and do something satisfying in the future. 31 isn't too old to have some measure of success. However, the fact that I'm currently disabled by autism symptoms after I've fought my whole life for improving my situation makes me really pissed off at the roles repeated trauma and privilege do play in this, and I think that it's morally necessary to spread that information to the Elon Musks of the world. Edit: I guess his focus is on analyzing the successes, so it makes sense that Adam wouldn't focus as much on the circumstances of "failures". It can just be frustrating to see things on the other side, knowing a large percentage of people will blame people like me for my own failure, because people without nuance believe that I either don't possess many of these qualities or that I have some innate flaw or made poor choices, and those things have led to my failure, making it entirely my own responsibility rather than a failure of larger society.
Hello from sunny south of France ! I have not listen to the complete video yet but I stopped to remind any listener of the gratuit quote from the Host : "I've always wondered if my life is the poursuit of my potential or if my life is the creation of my potential". Sophie
if you have poor boundaries and have a people-pleasing character: the emphasis on giving should be explored first, because it's questionable. It might be good to focus on receiving and giving yourSELF first what you want to give to others. It might feel Selfish but in your case its crucial!
Such a joy to listen to a) the intellectual expertise of someone like Adam. I know he teaches this stuff and writes books about it, which brings that fluency and depth of understanding that is beguiling. He is a true geek (a total compliment), a fellow introvert (yay) and someone who has and is making a significant contribution to our understanding of the human condition. And b) the annoying, yet also beguiling verbal reasoning skills of Stephen. I am not sure I have seen anyone truly listen so deeply and then come back with a counter comment so readily. Thanks both. It's slightly annoying to have given 1 hour and 46 minutes of heartbeats to this, but I'm so glad I did...
It comes down to your definition of being smart. First-borns tend to be more achieving partly because of the leadership role they learn from taking care of their younger siblings. If I remember correctly, all the astronauts in the Mercury and Apollo programs were first-borns.
If you enjoyed this episode, could you please do me a favour and hit the like button 👍🏾 it helps us massively. Appreciate you all! 🙏🏽
That banner image at the top of your page here is highly misleading. It implies this is the place to come to get celebrity interviews. Anyone who's still subscribed now knows that this is now the place to come for shock docs telling you unless you change everything in your life you'll be dead in no time at all. Only 1 out of the last 20 videos here was anyone you'd vaguely call a celeb, and he's only a youtuber. UNSUBSCRIBED !!
Why is the unsubscribed number always stuck at 69%? 😏
What a great conversation and amazing insight. On a side note, GGMU 🙏
I’m subscribed but why do you think that less than 70% subscribe? The figure has not changed since I subscribed a few months ago !
Im looking for the poem that a guest (if it’s not Adam)?shared about “isn’t doing it"… ie: making a list is not doing it…announcing you’re going to do it is not doing it…Was it Adam or a different guest?
As somebody who suffers from lots of imposter thoughts, I really appreciated the idea that if a handful or more people believe in you, we should believe them. I will try to remember that as much as possible going forward
@jessicamcloughlin8587then you must believe in yourself. And it doesn’t hurt to get feedback from everyone as to why they don’t believe in you. Lol
Tengen toppa gurren lagan style: Listen, Simon. Don't believe in yourself. Believe in me! Believe in the kamina who believes in you!
Thumbs up if you clicked this because you're a first born and wanted to feel validated by the video. 😅
😂 Hahaa... No.. I think humans study what already exists to unpack as much data?!😊🙏🏼
Yes! I'm sharing it with my sisters too 😂
Yeah that’s me 😂
I sent it to my siblings even before I watched 😂
Heck yeah !! 😂😂😂
Man, I really Iike this guy. A psychologist and neuroscientist here. I will be reading his books from now on. Really enjoy content Ike this. Thank you Stephen. I love DOAC and I get so much out of your channel.
Successful people don't become that way overnight. most people see at a glance-wealth, a great career, purpose-is the result of hard work and hustle over time. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life, 🙏🙏🙏
Starting early is the best way of getting ahead to build wealth, investing remains a priority. I learnt from my last year's experience, i am able to build a suitable life because I invested early ahead this time
I urge everyone to start somewhere now no matter how small, this is literally the time for that, forget material things, don't get tempted,i became more better the moment i realized this.
People should remember: poverty is not an accident, a coincidence or an inevitability. It is something which is manufactured by the ruling class.
yeah investment is the key to sustaining your financial longevity but venturing into any legitimate Investment without a proper guidance of an expert can lead to a great loss too
Obviously these investment requires much cash and concentration to start?
Didn’t we celebrate 4M subscribers two seconds ago? I blinked and we’ve hit 5M! So proud to be part of this family ❤ thank you for bringing incredible content every episode
The saying, 'you get what you ask for' works. He askes for the subscribers, and they listen and deliver.
Nice robot comment. 5 mil and only 250k views.
@@indochinaconnex4308 I hope you heal from whatever hurt you. There’s no need to be nasty. The video was released 12 days ago and has 250K views which is incredible because it will continue to reach audiences as the days and months go by. Thanks for the engagement, you’re helping the channel 🤩🤩🤩🤩
And we are now at 6M+
The insights on procrastination were spot on! For entrepreneurs, it's crucial to break tasks into smaller steps and set specific deadlines for each. This approach reduces the overwhelm and makes it easier to start, which is often the hardest part.
Break tasks into smaller steps and set specific deadlines for each.
Break tasks into smaller steps and set specific deadlines for each.
Break tasks into smaller steps and set specific deadlines for each.
Plain and simple but oh so effective. I have set a reminder on my phone to remind me this every day . Thank you☺
@TheDiaryOfACEO Steven, there are so many famous/popular podcasters around but you are truly one of the best, if not the best I've come across. You allow your guests to speak without interrupting and ask intelligent questions at the right moment. Kudos and thanks for the great content. Really look forward to your podcasts.
As the oldest of four, I've always felt like the "cowcatcher" of the family, the first to try and experience EVERYTHING, and to pass down to the others what I learned so they wouldn't make the same mistakes I made because I just didn't know going in.
I feel the same exact way as an older sibling 😅
As the youngest sibling I'm the one in this role
I finally feel seen. Damn. Too many mistakes but I’ve lived though😂😂 time to get serious
@@123shotassame, the eldest in mine follows others blindly, doesn't question... often stuck with quite bizarre way of thinking without backed rationales
Adam Grant has a resting smiley face. Love listening to him but looking at his face light up every time he cites his sources gives me even greater joy 😀
I think when you’re describing moderate or effective procrastination, it’s really what I think of as a “brain break”. If you keep pushing at something when you’re stuck, or tired, you won’t make progress in a positive direction. But, if you give yourself a “brain break”, you come back to it with some “fresh-ness”.
After listening to Adam's discussion on disagreeable givers, I had a moment of clarity realizing that I fall into that category. Despite my genuine care for others and my proactive nature in wanting to assist them, I often find myself labeled as negative when I take initiative to rectify injustices or make positive changes. This insight has been invaluable in helping me understand myself better, acknowledging the complexity of my character and motivations.
Thanks Adam!
That "you're negative" comment is BS, it takes awareness and insight to identify issues and takes TRUE positivity to improve the issue. Its a complete inversion of reality but its the prevailing perception and you have to find a balance or just be around folks that get it.
1:06 Honesty is the highest expression of loyalty.
Criticize yourself out loud.
I have never considered mulling over a problem as procrastination. In the sewing community, when we come to a point where we are stuck or the project isn’t come out the way we envisioned, we put the project in a corner somewhere and come back to it at some point in the future, often reimagined.
💯
Dreams are a huge help to me. I solve problems and conceive new ideas while I sleep. I find it saves time because I'm working and sleeping at the same time. The saved time gets used to implement ideas or to move ahead past where I was stuck.
I think risk taking can also be the result of being inexperienced and or younger, resulting in a kind of naive risk taking where you are unaware of the actual magnitude of the actual risk. Not knowing what you don't know.
Risk taking can also be a result of desperation. Not just being desperate, but also having the kind of temperament that is good at innovating and "thinking outside the box", by people who naturally have a non conventional way of
looking at a problem. A solution may seem to be riskier to others. because it's not familiar and not the conventional way of doing the thing.
Wow, I followed you right down that rabbit hole. Thanks for the fun!
Would like to know more about "only children" as an only child. A professor and a writer. I wrote my first book in 6 months, but have been writing my second novel over 14 years. A combination of trying to write a sequel and standalone book that does have significantly better writing, but because of several personal losses (my mother's death, a direct hit by Cat 5 hurricane, and trauma at work), has meant disruptions to the creative progress and a nasty case of writer's block has made it feel like a Herculean task. I am going to finish this book because it drives me nuts leaving something so important to me uncompleted, but the anxiety, fear of failure, and self doubt have to go. Nothing is perfect and I have to give myself grace to finish the novel.
When he said “if you have techniques for making discomfort less uncomfortable or if you know how to get comfortable being uncomfortable” my mind went 🤯🤯🤯 OMG!!! Huge nugget of perspective!!
Omgggg yessss Adam Grant ❤❤❤ “You build your confidence by taking the leap 🙌 you become ready by putting yourself in situation that you don’t think you can excel at yet.” Huge fan of your books. I love how open you are about your experiences with diving and the kind of fear you’ve faced. Hearing about this from my hero gives me courage to have a bit more faith in myself to go outside of my comfort zone and try the things I’ve always said I wanted to do.
thanks for another great interview Steven!!
Another possible theory regarding birth order could be that younger children experience more authority with older siblings and parents and look to "rebel" a bit more. Fantastic talk!
Great guest, a pleasure to listen to him. Clear, Funny, positive, knowledgeable, well spoken - sets the standard for other speakers and you can see this in the cute spontaneous interactions as well
Dear Stephen,
Before I discovered your channel, I had been thinking that CEOs must be inhumane, not necessarily because of their nature, but because you have to make so many difficult decisions that you become kind of desensitized. Also, power and money can spoil even the best people. You have, however, have shattered my illusions about that. You're always so compassionate and supporting, it's just a joy to see.
Thank you.
Next week - how siblings outperform the first born .
Week after that - how only child’s are child prodigies ,
& the week after that how’s its really better to not be born at all .
The sibling competition spiral 😂 love my siblings so much
I watched one where they said the youngest become the richest
This channel was on 400,000 subs when I subscribed. Absolutely blew up. These conversations have helped me grow in so many ways as I know they will have in soooo many people. So I just wanted to say thank you to Steven and the DOAC team!! 💙🙌 x
Wow! How long ago was that?
This is basic benefits you’d get from high level networking. I’m glad you guys can benefit from it. See you in the other side of the tax bracket.🤝
100% true that most leaders are surrounded by “yes” people who never challenge them. I Love that Adam points this out and encourages challenge networks. Brilliant!! Fantastic interview!! 👏🏼👏🏼
Practice does not make perfect. Practice promotes learning. Perfect practice makes perfect. Perfect practice stunts growth and dissipates creativity.
I’m a painter and have never believed in “creative blocks.” I’ve always incorporated what I called productive procrastination into my painting practice.
Do explain! ☺️
Would love to hear more about that process!
I'm listening to this and I'm 21:20 mins into it, and can relate to ALL of it. From procrastination to using Google and questioning the status quo. Had to stop to write this so I can focus on the remainder of the talk.
This guy was so good! He’s got an incongruity in his face? He does have a kind of friendly (goofy) muppet’s? face, but when he stops talking, your side angles as he’s listening shows a searing intelligence in those eyes! He’s very intelligent and I can imagine on sight, it’s not immediately apparent! Those ice breakers he mentioned would really work for him!
Three important takeaways I often forget to live by:
1. Use skill power, not willpower: My gloss on this is that deferring gratification is more about developing skills to make doing the right things easier. For instance, engineer your environment to (a) add friction to starting time-wasting activities and (b) minimize distractions.
2. Know how good is good enough for the task at hand. Your time is limited and must be allocated across different projects. Where will additional effort or quality yield the highest long-term ROI? A perfectionist mindset is often a poor investment of time and effort.
3. Everyone has different life experiences and something to teach you if you're prepared to listen and learn.
After so much struggles I now own a new house and my family is happy once again everything is finally falling into place!!
I'm 37 and have been looking for ways to be successful, please how??
Thanks to my co-worker (Alex) who suggested Ms Claudia Vecchi Nese .
😱Sounds familiar, I have heard her name on several occasions.. and both her success stories in the wall Street journal!
The economic hardship, recession, unemployment and the loss of job caused by covid pandemic is enough to push people into financial ventures.
* I don't really blame people who panic. Lack of information can be a big hurdle. I've been making more than $21k passively by just investing through an advisor, and I don't have to do much work. Inflation or no inflation, my finances remain secure. So I really don't blame people who panic.
I’m an inventor. this guy really understands inventors and the process.
I like the fact that Adam Grant doesn’t hesitate to speak what is hard to hear to some people.
i can hear it with the volume low.
Among other things, this inspired me to ask a few former staff, colleagues, and supervisors for input & advice about our time working together. New leadership level unlocked! Thank you! 🙏🏻
I did not realize the potential that I had until I took risks and faced my fears. Now I feel wonderful because I was bold and passionate. I was not afraid of failure. Only my uncle believed in me and my talent. I did not know that had had it😂
Ronaldo’s style of play may invite debate, it’s undeniable that his presence elevates the performance of those around him and contributes to the overall success of his team. In the end, the true measure of his teamwork lies not only in statistics but also in the tangible impact he has on his teammates and the team’s achievements!
According to the stats on this show, every team he's joined has gone downhill. Just saying. I have no idea who the guy is.
Stats say no. That’s not opinion it’s the truth
it's such bullshit@@lorrie000
stats to do not say that about Ronaldo in particular.... do your research@@chrisgault87 . Every team he has been in has gotten better and won more trophies.... except when ten hag was there. that guy was the problem. look at his team now
The thing with Ronaldo is that he played in one of the greatest teams of all time at Real Madrid where he won everything multiple times. Going to Juventus and and Manchester United (which are
World famous clubs and have had past success) is a downgrade not only in skill but in mentality. The guy is a born winner and is the most competitive person around and expects his team to deliver for him( because he scores the goals) He can become easily frustrated when things don’t go his way which I guess can cause tension within a team setting.
Side note: CR7 and LM10 play in different positions and have different styles, let’s just appreciate that we had this time to enjoy the 2 best players around at the same time.
This 2% number is entirely based on your definition of success! By my definition, good quality of life and relationships, most people are successful!!!
Mines is the number of lives you support and help. ❤ Thanks for sharing
Shouldn't have used an inaccurate statement about Ronaldo's game. One of the things the athlete is lauded for is how he raises the level of every team he has played at. Entire teams player at a higher level collectively when he joins them. This is well documented. You can be a focal point for the attack of a team and simultaneously elevate each and every attribute of the entire team when you are the type of athlete that he is.
I comment and like for the algorithm, so that more people listen this great conversation!!! I enjoyed it so much and learned so much! It was entertaining and light-hearted as well, with the jokes in between. Thank you Adam & Steven! 🙏
Hi, I am Bindi from india living in Australia english is not my language but still I love your chanel very slow way I ma listening this broadcast many time pose because understand with my google translation then again catinew write some note, I really liked it I can understand How much Hard work behind the one broadcast..... thanks my wishes and blessing always your broadcast will be Hit yes I Hit the button and subscribe button as well because your promises it will be worth it 🎉🎉🎉🎉
To clarify - he is saying how aiming for full excellence is not always best - know when you are ready to stop & launch & progress…
A very well rounded man. I need to find one of his books. I'm sure my husband would enjoy it.
I love Adam! He doesn't know it but man the impact he had on my view of self and society has been phenomenal ever since I read Originals. He's one of those people that you just want to absorb every single word they say!
Thank you, Steven and The DOAC team, for inviting him over! 💙
Thank you so much. Your questions are perfectly aimed, you lead the interview in a way that the listener can follow & builds the concept & makes sense. You're a good listener. Straight thinking. I appreciate it!
I'm a proscatinador who in addittion is very hard on himself... I am a reseacher so for me, everything is a project; at work and in life. Your concept about procastrination made me realize my procastination is not me sabotaging his flow. My procrastrination is indeed me planning, me researching. In many cases my procastrination is my analisis, my planning phase ;).
Great invite, very nice epidosie. Thanks!
Video games, like most things we use, have different effects depending on how we use them. I don’t know which research he is referring to, but not being able to stop playing is the opposite of discipline, for example. And that I have seen a lot of when it comes to video game use.
I have even seen it go as far as kids (and grownups) becoming antisocial because their main focus was video games. Another thing is that skills learned within a virtual environment don’t necessarily translate to real life. And then there is the specific motivation that drives kids wanting to play video games because it provokes a chemical drive and reward cycle that is not easily found in real life, and that is considered dangerous because it is addictive. I therefore sincerely doubt that the benefits outway the bad sides.
Games have always had a dopamine cycle that has potential dangers. One counter argument is kids learning destructive real world behaviours to derive dopamine in similar fashion (one particularly stupid way for slightly older kids in my area was jumping off bridges).
There is a stronger argument than ever against videogames as many of the mainstream games have been optimised to provide unhealthy reward loops with less difficulty. This on top of predatory gambling mechanics can really damage brains at a young age.
We don't have a deal, because your podcast can't get better, it's perfect!
Incredible episode. Wanted to write down every other sentence ❤. Genuinely thought provoking! Thank you Steven and Adam!
One of the most interesting guests ever. Thank you
I absolutely loved this episode.
I got the most smiles in any of your episodes I've watched, and very much toward the end. Thank you!
Shame the Renaldo comments have masked the rest of this interview & turned some off - his comments on perfection & aiming for 10 are very useful in life…
My three sons got scholarships. They had to maintain good grades to keep the scholarships. Graduated out of two of the best schools in my state. My father was one of eight siblings. All very smart.
It's again much about good old PARETO principle - on return on invested affects and on how much the specific topic or achievement matters at all, depending on context ofc.
This is an amazing interview ❤. Adam, Steven; thank you! I’m not even done listening and I had to stop to comment (@1:12).
I could write a few paragraphs on the learning. Going to have to listen again for sure 👍🏾.
I love Adam Grant!! Great guest ❤
I really loved this episode. I learned so much from the both of you. Just stumbled upon this podcast not so long ago and you share so many interesting people and topics work us! Thank you!
20:00 firefox better performers they stick longer
33:45 skills to choose such as endurance for getting out of comfort zone
52:00 everyone can be your teacher
1:23:00 seek teir advice and make them coaches
1:28:50
1:30:40
1:34:30 values vs beliefs
identity, sense of self
Can’t speak highly enough about this episode, guest and relatable questions. Will be rewatching
this was soooo goooooood.
aware not a particularly detailed insight or feedback but that's all I felt as this ended! SO GOOD! THANK YOU!
Perfectionists are terrified of 'criticism'.
I've heard that perfectionism is a bid for acceptance
First borns are the alpha of the family.
😂 you mean you like to think you are
This was so interesting and thought provoking.🙏 for all you do.
This one is my favorite so far that I’ve seen. Perfectly aligned with my interests at this point of my life. 🔥🔥
Regarding the conversation about sports (Ronaldo) - those who are interested might find Malcom Gladwell's work comparing basketball to other types of sports valuable. To paraphrase, certain types of sports require a team of multiple good players to be exceptions. For the other class of sports, like basketball, teams can win games if most of their players are just okay, as long as there is 1 or a few superstars. This is to say - the way you can improve your team is different across contexts.
Mega interesting. Some points that resonates:
The perceived tension between loyalty and honesty.
Brainstorming vs Brainwriting. Pairing people to promote anonymity.
Getting it right vs being right.
Knowing what you are bad at.
The importance of a Challenge Network.
Being a more agreeable disagreeable giver :).
And so forth. So many valuable thoughts.
Thank you.
I'll watch this later. Perhaps.
Bring him back!
I can't execute every idea I have! But you've made me aware that I turn to find approval before moving forward.
Loved this podcast. Brilliant from start to finish
Google for email or browser is a hard no for some people, and it isn’t because we aren’t creative. Depends on what people believe about digital narrative and manipulation of the public thoughtform.
Other than that - super edifying to listen. Grateful. Cheers!
Yeah it's hard to find a more simplified analysis I hope to hear better in the rest of the vid. It's like saying people who go more to the restaurant have more culinary taste.
What about finances?
It is only logical that a player like Ronaldo would have such an effect on a team, especially post 2017, because he assumed the role of strict poacher. A poacher in any team is expected to be demanding of the ball, and selfish with finishing. That's the whole point. It is important to note that this observation should be restricted to his plays post 2017 RM only. Additionally, this has been a problem with other stars like MJ or Kobe in Basketball. Even Messi for that matter has a net negative impact on the defensive side of the team. But you don't play Messi because he can defend, or Ronaldo for he can play second balls. Their movements and timings, rising to the occasion, handling pressure, leading from the front, and the unbridled magical footballing ability is what makes these players indispensable. That is why teams are often created around these players. Barca around Messi and RM around Cristiano. No team without such a balance would win CL. PSG and Juve clearly failed to create such a balance. This is by no means a criticism of Ronaldo.
I guarantee this guest knows nothing about football
Thank you theres a couple of toxic guys in the comments who cant wait to jump on the hate bandwagon
Yea idk why a guy that clearly doesn’t watch football uses a player as an example based on pointless stats from tabloids
You dont need to critizise yourself to have a group that speaks their mind. You need to support an openess without prestige, leave your ego at the door, focus on making every member the best they can be, train them and challenge them at their level
Another banger episode where I wrote down so many inspiring and intriguing thoughts. Thank you guys :)
My older siblings are definitely not smarter…they’re a mess and we two younger siblings are sorting out their mess…procrastination is their middle name….but still I love them dearly 😌
Gosh, I am the least successful of my 3 siblings and I can only hope they love me. I’ve never pulled on them, at least.
I always doubt it though. 😢
Older sisters are typically smart and mature. Older brothers are typically a mess.
Fascinating.. my son (take it from my previous comment) got hooked on the games and we couldn’t do anything to take him away from gaming.. I wanted him to go outside in the nature more and play with other kids but he get’s depressed and frustrated how we handled him that way. But thru all that.. he excelled in school.. first honors and sums cum laude in college. And till to this day, he is competing in games all over the place. And I also know someone who is older than my son and had this Nintendo in his hands every time we see his family.. then now, he makes his money from technologies and got his own website and up and running.. traveling the world and get to taste the lavish lifestyle of a millionaire.. 😊
When you truly believe in something, you will go all out and do your best to achieve it.
Not only am I the youngest in the family. But I am the youngest among all my cousins. And have the most degrees and the most ‘successful’ in every. And I mean every. Aspect of life.
And modest
Im intrigued by the audacity you've blatantly inbedded
*amongst the plethora of grammatical errors used to advertise your superiority. Your cousins must be jealous.
@@danamite101 wow. Your brilliance has pointed out grammatical errors. I did t know that RUclips comments were being graded by and 3rd grade teacher.
Middle child here 🙋♀️ My upbringing was very different from the norm (perhaps this had an influence on the outcome). I score higher than both my sisters for both IQ and GAI, I was accelerated to my older sister’s schooling level at age 8, I learnt to read and write faster, had more natural proficiency for music (they both quit after a few years, so no knowing how it would’ve turned out if they continued), and my family consider me to be the most successful.
In other words, if you are an older sibling watching this, don’t be too quick to jump on your high horse.
So freaking funny point about choice of browsers. I have a MacBook with parallels for Windows/Work...I use multiple browsers - Safari for entertainment (AppleTV, Netflix and RUclips - where I watch DOAC :) ) Chrome for research and browser based applications; IE or Edge for "work" browsing....lol
Great to hear the difference between Self Promotion vs. Idea Promotion 💡
Just bought “Think Again” to read as a school teacher needing change. 🥰
For the brainstorming, when I was doing game jams I used a digital whiteboard and asked people to pick any corner and write down all ideas they could think of, and then we could discuss it later/the day after. It was relatively anonymous. It made even introverts get some space to present their ideas :D
PRESSURE is how you know your team is effective or not. Those who are about the ALL will adapt and find a way to win together. Those who are about themselves, will compete and create unnecessary conflicts to mitigate, wasting energy, resources, and valuable time to adapt.
Soooo what happens to the middle children? I'm No.6 of 9. I actually feel like my younger siblings are way less risk takers. Really loved this episode. Very interesting information surrounding procrastination. For some things in my life, I fall under the procrastinator that procrastinates too long out of fear and then never accomplish certain things. But, hopefully will be able to change this about myself.
Unbelievable amount of wisdom thank you thank you I had lots to think about and I solved lots of problems I didn't know I had.
Are you going to make that jump eventually ? "ya sure" then what are you waiting for ? - If you identify yourself as your beliefs than you won't see the truth that will allow you to honour your values(what's more important to you, vs what you think is true) - Ask your critics for advice so they can become your coach.
I was the third born of three sons in the family. All that they said is true. BUT I believe that parents are obsessed with being the PERFECT parent and doing everything they could to focus on this kid. They wanted a second child, but had a difficult time getting and staying pregnant - so that kid was born 10 years after the first. BUT then - three years after the success of the second you hear the words - "What do you mean I'm pregnant ? ! ? !" The first two did scouts, swimming lessons, etc. The surprise baby had none of that. I don't feel cheated or not loved, but I had to forage for myself and make anything I had on my own. I don't thing they didn't want me, but quite frankly - I think after putting all that energy into the first two - they were exhausted and just over it by the time it came to be my turn. The oldest had a moderately successful life. The middle was a disaster that literally has always lived in a trailer part. And I've traveled the world, own two posh homes and owned a very successful business most of my adult life.
Wait, video games may not be the devil but compounded with social media and this idea that you need to live on the net is definitely impacting the social thread in society.
Not sure about smarter but Older siblings are for sure wiser if that makes sense😊
@@11235butI had to be when younger ( oldest of 4) by virtue of age.
But boy did my 3 younger sibs become more successful than me!
And I prob “ did” get the best genes from my parents ( thinking that’s how nature worked) but I blew it, compared to them.
They all worked harder.
Great episode! Very insightful. I miss the business episodes though Steven. Please do one every so often.
Loved this interaction and sharing of knowledge. Thank you Alan and Steven.
Politician, preacher and prosecutor approach/scientist. Useful.
25:46 Loved this episode with Adam Grant. The understanding of perfectionism was really helpful to me. If I hadn't addressed my real struggle with perfectionism, I wouldn't take the risks that I have in my career. Imperfection still brings me anxiety. It's hard wired and a continuous process.
Wow!! Really happy this conversation resonated with you. Thank you for sharing! Team DOAC 🙏
@TheDiaryOfACEO Adam did briefly mention survivorship bias a bit before talking about how surviving uncomfortable positions increases tolerance to discomfort. I wish he'd gone more into the way that the trauma for some does lead to heightened anxiety for risk taking because when a person lacks privilege they often can not afford risk. Adam only very briefly mentions the marshmallow study, and it seems important to expand more on aspects of privilege in relation to repeated trauma.
When you've experienced the bad things over and over, you might just try to cope by attempting to not end up back there, rather than pursuing your full potential, or you might lack the energy for pursuit. That seems like it could indicate some difference between trauma or even capital T Trauma, versus repeated capital T Trauma, which can cause changes in the brain and body that are permanent or more difficult to overcome. There's probably an unknown bell curve formula of amount of trauma combined with privilege that a person is able to have before the effects are more negative than positive.
I feel both motivated and dejected by this talk, because I recognize in myself the natural capacity for many of the qualities Adam points to in originals, but I started in poverty, never got out of poverty, and I've lost more than one job for too openly questioning authority because something they suggested didn't even make sense by their own purported morals and goals. At this point, I'm 31 years old and experiencing burnout so badly that my psychiatrist thinks I actually have undiagnosed autism, so I'm on a waitlist for testing, while the symptoms have already become fairly disabling from the toll of pushing myself for 31 years.
Elon Musk, who also exhibits obvious signs of autism, some of which correlate to Adam's concept of an original, never had to deal with poverty or an abusive mother with schizophrenia or any of the other numerous challenges in my life that I'm not going to waste space listing. Elon Musk is a rich man, and I'm a poor woman, who has experience with being disliked by the financially secure men above me. My own resilience leads me to the hope that I can get back in the game and do something satisfying in the future. 31 isn't too old to have some measure of success. However, the fact that I'm currently disabled by autism symptoms after I've fought my whole life for improving my situation makes me really pissed off at the roles repeated trauma and privilege do play in this, and I think that it's morally necessary to spread that information to the Elon Musks of the world.
Edit: I guess his focus is on analyzing the successes, so it makes sense that Adam wouldn't focus as much on the circumstances of "failures". It can just be frustrating to see things on the other side, knowing a large percentage of people will blame people like me for my own failure, because people without nuance believe that I either don't possess many of these qualities or that I have some innate flaw or made poor choices, and those things have led to my failure, making it entirely my own responsibility rather than a failure of larger society.
Yet another episode I'll be listening to again!
Adam is one of my favorite authors. Great interview…
Hello from sunny south of France ! I have not listen to the complete video yet but I stopped to remind any listener of the gratuit quote from the Host : "I've always wondered if my life is the poursuit of my potential or if my life is the creation of my potential". Sophie
if you have poor boundaries and have a people-pleasing character: the emphasis on giving should be explored first, because it's questionable. It might be good to focus on receiving and giving yourSELF first what you want to give to others. It might feel Selfish but in your case its crucial!
Huge fan of Adam grant, learned so much from him 🎉
Such a joy to listen to a) the intellectual expertise of someone like Adam. I know he teaches this stuff and writes books about it, which brings that fluency and depth of understanding that is beguiling. He is a true geek (a total compliment), a fellow introvert (yay) and someone who has and is making a significant contribution to our understanding of the human condition. And b) the annoying, yet also beguiling verbal reasoning skills of Stephen. I am not sure I have seen anyone truly listen so deeply and then come back with a counter comment so readily. Thanks both. It's slightly annoying to have given 1 hour and 46 minutes of heartbeats to this, but I'm so glad I did...
Another great show. Thank you
It comes down to your definition of being smart. First-borns tend to be more achieving partly because of the leadership role they learn from taking care of their younger siblings. If I remember correctly, all the astronauts in the Mercury and Apollo programs were first-borns.