psychology
Fourth, use the new belief often and make it part of your identity. Your beliefs are the stories about yourself that you have accepted to be true … so you can decide to change the stories.
Kevin Horsley • Unlimited Memory: How to Use Advanced Learning Strategies to Learn Faster, Remember More and be More Productive
Are you dreaming about how svelte you’ll look in that swimsuit after the diet you’re planning? Women who did that lost twenty-four fewer pounds than those who didn’t. Fantasizing about getting that perfect job? Those who dwelled on it sent out fewer applications and ended up getting fewer offers. Students who imagined a big A for the semester spent
... See moreEric Barker • Barking Up the Wrong Tree: The Surprising Science Behind Why Everything You Know About Success Is (Mostly) Wrong
You didn’t choose the robbery, but it’s still your responsibility to manage the emotional and psychological (and legal) fallout of the experience.
Mark Manson • The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good Life (Mark Manson Collection Book 1)
.psychology
Fault is past tense. Responsibility is present tense. Fault results from choices that have already been made. Responsibility results from
Mark Manson • The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck: A Counterintuitive Approach to Living a Good Life (Mark Manson Collection Book 1)
.psychology
If this isn’t possible in your life today, start with the 3M plan: devote 15 percent of your time to a project that aligns with your core passion and purpose. Fifteen percent is about an afternoon a week, though you can easily split this into a pair of two-and-a-half-hour blocks and get similar results.
Steven Kotler • The Art of Impossible
.psychology
Intervention design is really just the translation of pressures into something we can actually create; if pressures are the levers, interventions are how we pull them, hopefully in the right order and with the right strength.
Matt Wallaert • Start at the End: How to Build Products That Create Change
.psychology .modelthinking . Implementation
Banning something makes it very desirable.
Blinkist • Our brain loves shortcuts, and they can be used to manipulate us.
Second, dopamine tunes signal-to-noise ratios in the brain, which means the neurochemical increases signal, decreases noise, and, as a result, helps us detect more patterns. There’s a feedback loop here. We get dopamine when we first detect a link between two ideas (a pattern), and the dopamine that we get helps us detect even more links (pattern
... See moreSteven Kotler • The Art of Impossible
.psychology pattern detection loop by dopamine
Stories and limits—that’s what grit and quit come down to. Focus on those two and you can be as unstoppable as a Toronto raccoon—but so successful that you’ll never have to eat out of a trash can.