Hey Spoonfed! Wanted to express my sincere thanks for your awesome content. It's a small gesture, but I hope it brings some joy your way. Keep shining bright!
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Not at all! It’s not small in my book! Getting a super thanks always brightens my day and keeps me charged. Means a lot to me seriously. Thank you friend :)
@runicthor41059 ай бұрын
The 1% better everyday concept isn’t meant to be taken literally as he points out, growth isn’t linear. He’s just saying small incremental improvements over time add up to big results.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
True. But growth often doesn’t compound like he says either (i.e very rarely do you get to be 38x better at the end of the year) unless you conscientiously and systematically choose the things that give you the biggest return time and time again. Don’t get me wrong, I fully support his overall message. Just trying to add a bit more nuance to the conversation he started to ensure you get as close to “38x” as humanly possible.
@runicthor41059 ай бұрын
@@spoonfedstudy thing is, he understands getting 37% everyday isn’t realistic, in one of his graphs (the plateau of latent potential), he shows how progress is non-linear, but growth does compound, just not in the way people typically think. But I understand what your doing, by adding that nuance as you say, it can help people improve better, as people mis-view the message. I just think it’s wrong to say atomic habits doesn’t make any sense, when it really does.
@hornedgod28739 ай бұрын
I like this because I didn’t read the book 😁
@runicthor41059 ай бұрын
@@hornedgod2873 read it, it’s a good book
@jasonr21719 ай бұрын
@@runicthor4105 It's an attention-grabbing title. He actually agrees with James Clear, but you don't build an audience by saying you agree with people.
@shaneog62988 ай бұрын
I saw it as more of a way of motivating people to improve 1% daily because it seems very easily achievable when they're first forming a new habit. Which makes the habit more accessible in our minds and we feel satisfied completing that goal each day. (Which he talks about later in the 4 laws of behaviour change). He goes into how bad habits are easy to form because they're easily achievable and give you satisfying results immediately. Which is why I think the 1% rule can be useful for people to see some sort of 'Atomic' result in the long tedious road to seeing substantial growth.
@ooulalah43338 ай бұрын
That's the point I got. You feel progress is accumulating even if it's immeasurable. That defeats many people and Clear's advice is encouraging to me. It's not about the destination (like final weight lost) but the journey and who you're becoming, ever improving.
@SimonSlav-GameMakingJourney9 ай бұрын
Habits are great for keeping you on track and preventing you from falling off. But I believe big changes come from the opposite and that is breaking habits and trying something new. Then you establish new habits to keep you on the new track.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Well said! Sometimes the biggest bang for your buck is to get rid of these so-called “dark habits.” Arguably, this may be harder but the returns likely enormous.
@ooulalah43338 ай бұрын
Ya well that aligns with Clear's methodology
@MatthewEaton9 ай бұрын
To be honest, it is Lean Systems thinking that he was really reaching for. That's where the 1% better motto comes from, and it isn't set in stone. As long as there is some sort of improvement in a system and it can be maintained, that's all that really matters. The Kaizen method to install the system is where the exponential growth comes from, but Kaizen projects often only last 5-7 days because they aren't meant to change the world. They're meant to simplify, install guardrails, put things in their place, so on and so on. While I agree James Clear didn't quite get the point, you are also not really doing much with it either. I think there is a little too much "literal interpretation" here where it really just needs to be "What did this stem from?" And this comes from someone who works as a project manager, works with Lean Systems and studies it often. Ah well, it was fun while it lasted. Have a good day now.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Very cool! Appreciate the insight and feedback. Always great to hear these perspectives and get closer to where ideas may have originated from and of course, learn about their intended uses. In the end, as long as we try our best to adapt ideas to suit our needs and improve what we can, then that’s a definite win in my book. Thanks for commenting!
@Silent_Awareness9 ай бұрын
Thanks! A thoughtful, entertaining, and well-balanced perspective on this popular, and often overhyped, yet still a really good, book.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Friend!! Who are you?? Thank you from the bottom of my heart. Seriously, I’m blown away by all your super thanks
@Silent_Awareness9 ай бұрын
@@spoonfedstudy I'm just a silent awareness, consuming and appreciating good content. Enjoy your work. Keep adding more good content for us all.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Will do! Hope to keep on earning your presence 👍
@heyheesun9 ай бұрын
This was so helpful! Thanks for breaking this info down into digestible pieces, all with a sense of humor. You even made the ad funny with the nachos 😂
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Haha heesun!!! You noticed!!! lol that entire ad is filled with little nuggets and treasures most people will never notice 😅
@サミュエル先生です4 ай бұрын
“None of it matters if you don’t show up to play” I love it
@JuanDuarte_589 ай бұрын
I feel that a lot of the commenters did not watch the entire video
@EddyGermosen-c7r9 ай бұрын
The book argues that 1% better is an identity based habit, not an outcome based habit. I notice you’re arguing about the “truth” of what 1% improvements looks like with outcome based habits, the first graph is still correct in rule 4. If you’re grabbing attention with that title good job, as long as you understood his argument.
@Gigusx9 ай бұрын
I'm not so sure if the "1% rule" really is worth time debunking. Personally I haven't met anyone who'd taken it literally or doesn't understand intuitively the things you've mentioned. The main principle is the trajectory and making sure your organize your life and habits in a way that the arrow points in the right direction. 1% everyday might not be realistically accurate, attainable or even desirable but it's a very simple mental model you can always refer back to and remind yourself whenever you need to. And of course: _“When a measure becomes a target, it ceases to be a good measure.”_
@kitgenz11149 ай бұрын
😂 I had to watch this several times because I kept getting distracted by the shenanigans in the graphics. This video is business in the listening, party in the video. 😂🎉
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Haha!! Yah half the fun is coming up with the little drawings to go with the video 😅
@amillar79 ай бұрын
I read that book and genuinely thought I missed something, because I didn't think it actually described an applicable method for improvement, more just a serious of anecdotes. Thank you for this!
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
I know right? Glad I wasn’t the only one!
@MarkLearns8 ай бұрын
@@spoonfedstudy so glad i wasn't either lol
@AdrianAstorga61057 ай бұрын
it means being better than yesterday it is not really a one percent better literally, It is about being consistent just like the concept of progressive overload in the gym.
@chessmaster20009 ай бұрын
Wow! What an insightful video!! 🤩 I thought it would be a clickbait title, but it had more gold and solid real dependable reliable advice I’ve seen in a video in a very long time!
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Thank you Nathan! Always trying to make sure each video I put out there gives you some real educational value + some entertainment. Happy to have you here ❤️
@Keepingitsimp9 ай бұрын
I think I read the first 20 pages of the book and I kinda gotta the drift of it. Unless missed some major points. Here is a throwaway summary. - Start with tiny changes - Stay consistent with those tiny changes( compounding effect) - Tie changes and habits to your highest identity. Simple and when applied I think it can be powerful.
@DanielReed-b2s9 ай бұрын
You forgot the important point that environment influences habit pages 80 or so.
@shaneog62988 ай бұрын
You should continue reading... He starts with simple ideas and adds to them later on. Such as environmental influence and a 4 law system on how to form habits as well as the inverse of those 4 laws that allow you to break bad habits etc. He does talk about how genetics plays a role a little bit as well. I like how he uses real life stories of successful people who employed these ideas into their own lives. Though, survivorship bias exists too and not everything is going to work for everyone.
@michaelsanislo33459 ай бұрын
Great video! What does 1% better a day even look like? I like your idea of tackling the low-hanging fruit first.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Thank you! Glad you enjoyed it! Yah often it’s hard to dissect habits into the micro-level 1% improvements that are still in the category of systemic change. Realistically you either get a huge return on a habit you’ve never done before or you fall into a linear incremental type growth that rapidly diminishes in return over time because it’s hard to sustain. At that point in time, it’s time to move on to a new “Fruit” because the effort is just not worth the squeeze.
@meronica9 ай бұрын
Finally someone said it. I just subscribed. Can't wait to check out your other videos.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Welcome to the channel! Hope you stick around, get something out of it and maybe even have a few laughs here and there!
@gokulhemanthkumar45569 ай бұрын
Thank you! Someone said it.
@Neat_profile11 күн бұрын
For a multibillion dollar hedge fund like Berkshire Hathaway, a 20% a year return is an uncommonly high rate, but for smaller funds who manage a smaller amount of Capital, like a couple tens of millions, it is much more common to see them returning 25% and 30% per year on their equity.
@landonoffmars95989 ай бұрын
I appreciate your criticism. I've been thinking in a similar way (after having read ½ of the book). It seems the author uses a math chart as a simile. The good thing I've noticed, so far, is that the book highlights the importance of observation before attempting to change anything.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
That’s true! Observing and seeing what will be most useful to you or getting you the biggest returns is key
@Taj-187 ай бұрын
LOL "my airbending is actually not too shabby." in promotion "what did I do well?"
@anastasiapidgaina93199 ай бұрын
Sure thing! Your thoughts in the video totally resonated with me. It was super cool to hear your perspective! Big thanks for the awesome content.
@Pcoxproductions9 ай бұрын
9:44 10,000 experiments is better than 10,000 hours
@editophobia_9 ай бұрын
I truly agree with what you said. However, I believe we can take this productivity framework a level higher if we add the laws from "Eat that frog". What I mean is don't just put your efforts. Keep checking if the return are the highest or does another activity improves the skill better. In your example you compared the day 1, day 100 and day 1000 of learning new diseases but if we use the laws from the book. We won't need to reach the 1000 day mark. We check our results and see that the improvement has started to decrease beyond 1% after the 100 day mark. So, we can look out for a new activity with greater returns. Remember always do the task with the most returns first. "Resist the temptations to clear up small things first" - Brian Tracy
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
100%! Checking in and doing regular reflections are incredibly important. Thank you for that reminder!
@vladimirzraikovskii73189 ай бұрын
Sorry for stupid question, but how to copy your template in xtiles?
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
The second link in the description is my template! Click on it and you get immediate access when you make an account
@vladimirzraikovskii73189 ай бұрын
@@spoonfedstudy Thanks for prompt response. Somehow I can not copy it as a template
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
I’ll see what the issue is and get back to you. Send me an email at spoonfedstudy@gmail.com and I’ll see to it you get what you want
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Changed some settings from my end and it should allow duplication of the template now. Hope that solves it!
@secondevolvingx3222Ай бұрын
5:39 systemic upgrades for exponential level up growth 11:26 growth chart
@happypuppy61349 ай бұрын
Which non-fiction books do you recommend ? Btw your content is really very evidence based and has helped my personal growth a lot❤️
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
That’s so awesome to hear! That’s a great question and I haven’t kept as good of a list as I should so I may need to sit down and think about that a bit. What comes to mind right now is Man’s Search for Meaning, 7 Habits, and Power of Now to name a few. Most books have good concepts here and there interspersed with the so-so filler. Usually I take what happens to resonate, mixing and matching it with what I’ve gained elsewhere to create the tool I need for the moment at hand.
@FreedomMeansLearning-ke7dk7 ай бұрын
Tiny habits is much better than Atomic habits.
@citizeeeen9 ай бұрын
Exactly, just like so many other "Self-Help" books.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Good to see you again!
@timbuktu80695 ай бұрын
My problem is not the1% better. Sure, that can happen. My problem is halfway through, you're hit by the wrecking ball sportingly called life. Suddenly you're back to square one.
@KathySierraVideo9 ай бұрын
Yeeesss. Why do we insist on shoving a non-linear problem into a linear solution? But I reckon if all you have is an incremental “successive approximation” hammer, then every problem looks like an Atomic Habit nail. That said, I do love the atomic habit idea for installing a new and *simple* habit that gets attached to an existing one. Thinking that will somehow scale to complex behaviors? Nope.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Well said! Yah there’s a lot more nuance to all this than can be said in a simple nice tagline for a book, but I guess if he did that, he would’ve sold less books 😅
@__40su9 ай бұрын
We should be at the state of effortless effort in action. When we conduct a specific activity such as dancing, singing, playing sports and musical instruments, meditating, practicing martial arts, drawing and painting artworks, cooking, writing, even talking with someone, and washing dishes, there could be a moment when we can immerse ourselves to our action alone, where without our conscious efforts, we can effortlessly forget ourselves
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Love it when I fall into a flow state like that. I’d say making videos on KZbin often falls into that category ;)
@idrisahmed26597 ай бұрын
This is the concept of flow that ur talking about .... Effortless effort ....
@trebor251755 ай бұрын
Think you're missing the point and taking it far too literal for the concept being presented
@JamesBond-wv9xz8 ай бұрын
12:11 You said that the world is becoming more and more competitive IMMEDIATELY after noting the instant gratification era we live in that supposedly does the opposite. Can you explain this dichotomy?
@AlbertoniYT7 ай бұрын
Ok but setting the 1% rule aside , do you support what the book says after that ?
@EmilyRaffa-hm1vw7 ай бұрын
Read the chapter Advanced tactics - The downside of creating Good Habits
@physiotherapyinsider64689 ай бұрын
There are parts of the book that works for me and parts that are not. It depends on your current situation. So choose wisely.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Yah! Reading with purpose and intention! I dig
@smoff-bt9rm9 ай бұрын
Hey, I just finished reading that chapter and had the exact same thought! What the heck does 1% improvement look like for most tasks anyway? Ok, let's keep it simple and track miles walked - I actually do want to walk more. (If I walk 1 mile on day one, that's an infinite improvement from day zero, like you said, but never mind.) On day 2, I walk 1.01 miles. By day 233, I'm walking 10.06 miles a day; day 303, I'm walking 20.19 miles a day; day 362, I'm walking 36.31 miles a day. Needless to say, that's a ridiculous amount of walking that I'm never going to keep up. And I fail to achieve 37X improvement. Drat.
@Ari_diwan9 ай бұрын
😃 good one, I struggled to make sense of this too, good to know I wasn't alone
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Yah exactly! Another great intuitive example! Should’ve used this one instead of the medical diseases one I used in the video 😂
@Ari_diwan9 ай бұрын
@@spoonfedstudy his example is too good
@MeeCee52049 ай бұрын
And also by day 233, you've reduced your cholesterol, regulated your blood sugar, lost body fat, toned your muscles, improved your sleep, increased your energy, gained mental clarity and boosted your sexual stamina 😊
@shaneog62988 ай бұрын
I saw it as more of a way of motivating people to improve 1% daily because it seems very easily achievable when they're first forming a new habit. Which makes the habit more accessible in our minds and we feel satisfied completing that goal each day. (Which he talks about later in the 4 laws of behaviour change). He goes into how bad habits are easy to form because they're easily achievable and give you satisfying results immediately. Which is why I think the 1% rule can be useful for people to see some sort of 'Atomic' result in the long tedious road to seeing substantial growth.
@bonnielynn66629 ай бұрын
Made sense to me
@shahtradez8 ай бұрын
Atomic Habits is great for anyone ready to re-build their internal axioms. It's a recipe for change.
@BayBlade2011MC6 ай бұрын
From what I read so far, it works, it’s transformed my life. For reference, I’m bordering 13
@jkdwarrior39 ай бұрын
Dude yes! I'm so tired of the self help grift that makes up most of that market. I've been reading self help books for 15 years, just about every major title. Very few of them actually helped me change something for the better in my life.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Nice job keeping consistent with it though!
@epiphoney9 ай бұрын
The math, which is not explained in the book, is 1.01 times itself 365 times, or 1.01 to the power of 365 = 37.783... But this assumes improvement is exponential. I don't think you can get exponential improvements from things like weightlifting... Still, you can make a lot of progress if you do something every day. Habits are the right idea though. Humans are forgetful creatures, and things have to be internalized subsconsciously to be learned. But there's no limit to that. Look at our use of language. I don't think Doctor Smith from Lost in Space is a good example to follow, lol. Watch the oxalates from vegetables.
@aletseaniram9 ай бұрын
I really love your channel. But after watching the first 4 min, I have a serious doubt: Have you read the book? I did. The author does not mention that just 1% everyday is enough. He says somedays you’ll do more than in others. The book is about becoming your change. Read the book, please.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Thanks for your feedback! I hear you. Overall, the book does provide a lot of insights that are helpful. The idea behind this video was just to go more in depth on what consistently “getting better” at something each day may look like and lend some tips on other strategies that may help in that journey.
@aletseaniram9 ай бұрын
Ok. You’re picking just the main idea for this video. Got it. As I said to a former manager, who loves the book we’re discussing: It’s like cleaning my desk. 0% of germs killed everyday is nothing. Zero is not even a number to me. I rather wait a week or two and get 500000 results! THAT is success.🤣” I became more productive after reading the 12 week year. The only book that worked for me.
@aletseaniram9 ай бұрын
Ok. You’re picking just the main idea for this video. Got it. As I said to a former manager, who loves the book we’re discussing: It’s like cleaning my desk. 0% of germs killed everyday is nothing. Zero is not even a number to me. I rather wait a week or two and get 500000 results! THAT is success.🤣” I became more productive after reading the 12 week year. The only book that worked for me.
@drake190008 ай бұрын
Naval Ravikant calls it "making leverage"
@TheCompositeKing9 ай бұрын
The other issue is his notion that the best way to cure procrastination is through incorporating something as part of your identity. Like, if you want to read more, just start thinking of yourself as a reader. That's not how anything works. People who read do so because there are books they want to read, and they enjoy the process. They just do it. They don't wake up going, "I am a person who reads, therefore I must pick up this book and finish it." They are just excited to get back to the story. If you want to quit smoking, you don't think, "I am a person who doesn't smoke." People who don't smoke don't want to smoke. It isn't even something that occurs to them. This is the whole _don't think about pink elephants_ thing. They way you quit an addiction is to find something else that you prefer doing instead.
@runicthor41059 ай бұрын
That’s not the entire conception of identity-based habits. Your habits are like evidence your brain collects. He’s not saying to be like “I’m a reader, so I’m gonna read this book”, he’s saying have the identity you want, align with your habits. This means you have to get yourself to read (the other methods you can use in the book allow you to do this), and over time once you put in the reps, the habit will be established, and your identity will have shifted, and as we know from the voting study he mentioned in that same chapter (I found the study as I did many others like the implementation intention one), your beliefs about yourself (identity) influence your actions (habits), effectively creating a self-assuring identity-habit loop.
@TheCompositeKing9 ай бұрын
@@runicthor4105 No, James is not just saying that once you change your habits your identity will have shifted. That's just stating the obvious. He pretty explicitly tells the reader to do what I'm describing, not just once but throughout the book. He advises you to change your identity in order to change your habits. He wasn't just commenting on the cycle you've described. He merely used that as evidence to back up his prescription. In fact, you're going in reverse.
@user-eo1vk9 ай бұрын
@@TheCompositeKing Changing your perception and identity is crucial for habit changing. It builds your confidence
@runicthor41058 ай бұрын
@@TheCompositeKing ah yea I’ve went back since then and have seen what you are talking about. But he is kinda of right, he’s cited evidence about people being more likely to vote when they identify themselves as voters in a study (I found it). What he’s getting at with the identity-based habits, is that when you get your identity involved, the related behaviour will become more likely to happen. Identity influences habits, habits influences identity is pretty much the paradigm right there, and he is correct about that. And the other importance in the identity-based habits is that it’s superior to goal based habits, as goal based habits tend to be temporary changes, as pointed out in the systems over goals paradigms. And when it comes to systems, by defining your identity, it can act as a sort of outline for your systems.
@ooulalah43338 ай бұрын
I think you're missing the point.
@IakobusAtreides9 ай бұрын
Exceptional content
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Thank you! Wasn’t sure this was going to resonate with people given how popular this book is but I’m glad you are here :)
@Beuzer09 ай бұрын
The video starts with "Mmh akchtually, 1% better per day is mathematically impossible" and spends minutes on this statement. How am I supposed to take this video seriously? It's an illustration, an image to tell you that you start slow, very slow, and you'll be disappointed to not perceive progress, but that progress will get significantly better later. That's it, no need to be over-analytical about it. I started to apply some tips from the book and it works. I also recommend this book a lot because it helps to understand more about how our brains work with craving and addictions. And I like statements such as motivation being overrated, we shouldn't count solely on it and set up a solid system instead. If I could give one criticism, it's the book doesn't spend enough time about how to break bad habits. In an interview, James Clear said you should replace it with a good habit instead. And that is a great tip the book either forgot to mention, or doesn't underline enough.
@faithbwire91648 ай бұрын
Brought so much insight to my perception about lang journey
@krishnansarkar39697 ай бұрын
This is great content. Made me think. Skool seems promising, but i cant afford it. I think it could be a good fit for you though.
@mosesbrew151910 күн бұрын
38% increase in a thing is not the same as 38 times better. The book only claims that you will be 38% better not 3800% I want to believe you made a genuine error but somehow i don’t think that’s the case. You’re better than this.
@spoonfedstudy10 күн бұрын
Look at it again Moses. The tagline is actually 37.78 better, not 37.78%. Mathematically 1% compounded 365 times gives you 37.78, which again is 37.78x better. (1.01^365) That’s why practically, 1% better everyday for 365 days is inherently not easily attainable as a pure concept in and of itself.
@SvitlanaPopovaska9 ай бұрын
That's exactly what I think. Thank you
@benhayat98858 ай бұрын
great video but wish it was in the form of 10s videos in endless scroll form.
@Skydenski9 ай бұрын
Discord, a lot of people have accounts on discord already it'll be more easily accessible. I'm not sure what skool is
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Noted!
@TheFragranceApprentice8 ай бұрын
I honestly just feel this video was made to be contrarian to something that is popular.
@geoinmot9 ай бұрын
If you watch the whole video, you will find that this video does not oppose Atomic Habits, it compliments it. Interesting ideas behind 1% increase. Most people (including myself) don't really understand what it actuality implies.
@eieigo8 ай бұрын
omg what a clever guy you arethx a lot
@TrynaLearn-b3h9 ай бұрын
Increase by proportional percentage
@jakubzbroda9 ай бұрын
Why you focused so much on this 1% thing? It's not the point that people appreciate or take away from this book.
@asherray49698 ай бұрын
I really liked the book the Power of Habit
@jackcarpenters37599 ай бұрын
haha this is nice. You thought it through well mr spoonfedstudy.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Thanks Jack! Haha never been called mrspoonfedstudy before but it’s kind of cool!
@Macro-Mark6 ай бұрын
Atomic habits makes perfect sense! For the author. How much money did he make off of that book?
@A_n_y_t_i_m_e7 ай бұрын
Ah yes, another "guru" book in a sea of "guru" books. Selling shovels during a gold rush is a highly profitable business.
@sayzey7 ай бұрын
I think you've purposely missed the point.
@amrmohammed30559 ай бұрын
Amazing!!!
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Thank you for watching and commenting!
@hungry_girl2119 ай бұрын
I like how you didn't shit on atomic habits ❤😂
@azarak349 ай бұрын
To speak about 1% I think you should apply concept from engineering, which essentially says: there is a region on the curve for which the pattern holds. For example. If you are overweight by 20kg then you could device a plan where everyday you lose 0.2kg. You would be improving by 1% then (but not in a compound way, in a way that looks at initial and end condition). But once you reach the ideal BMI, the improvement in the weight department stops. With knowledge I think you can make both 1% improvement (domain specific knowledge) and compound effect (e.g. knowing three languages gives you pretty good intuition on words in other related languages). But yeah. For fitness there is a level that is: move your body and eat your greens and you will be at this level no effort. There is also level: eat insane amount of protein and be a gym rat to maintain this level of physique. For knowledge there is stage that you can truly boost your knowledge by 1%, but there is level where you just run to not become this professor- type guy who's knowledge base is outdated and quotes debunked research from 40 years ago. Then there is being old and doing stuff just to deteriorate slower. Such is life. 1% and compound effect holds in Some areas and for a period of time. But then it doesn't .
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Totally agree. A lot of it does come down to the specific situation and what you want to achieve as you’ve astutely pointed out with the various examples. The degree whereby your inputs affect your outputs can depend on so many things
@LillaMig9 ай бұрын
Sup
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Sup sup
@adragonro7 ай бұрын
Since Elon Musk is planing his days in 5 minutes blocks and very successfull, I think planing out is in fact corelated with success, so I like the advertised app❤ Nice video too👍
@garychow77196 ай бұрын
shit you not, this is also my thought when I heard the everyday improve 1% rule. I was like, do you even know maths. Do you even know the different between addition and multiplication. It is like, in day 1 I make $1, everyday I made 1% more, it is not hard right? Then in a few years I will be the richest person in the world. But then, I realize, yea. James has to expand his few ideas into a book, and he has to make these ideas catchy. So I just gave up and don't even bother to read. For me that book might have some merits but clearly the author does not know what he is talking about, or he intentionally writing false information and idea. Thank you for making this video though. I think all we need is not some idealistic methodologies to help, but something that is actually actionable.
@ooulalah43338 ай бұрын
9:39 This guy is a negative nelly missing the forest through the trees. He's nerding out on being too literal on the 1% idea (for half the video) instead of seeing the point. Not every bit of advice works for all but some comments I see here seem hypercritical. Maybe they want a quick fix which is not realistic. You have to do the work. I taught myself these principles long ago when I loved my life but forgot after many taumatic events. This guy seems more about tooting his own bell and being an advertisement. I guess some ppl have nothing else to post about.
@billat50859 ай бұрын
Finally somebody calling out that dude. Good job.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Thanks Bill! Appreciate you
@billat50859 ай бұрын
@@spoonfedstudy You are doing a good job. Keep it going. Btw for a interesting topic you might consider the 'Dual N Back' brain training.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Interesting! Haven’t heard of that before. Will look into it!
@BusterWiegand4 ай бұрын
Martinez William Martinez James Lopez Joseph
@bahpapajarmjackson9 ай бұрын
NVidia
@RezixDev9 ай бұрын
Discord
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Noted!
@ben_kendall8 ай бұрын
Skool
@MImranJ5 ай бұрын
clickbaity title, purposely missing the point. youtube please dont recomend channel again
@bahpapajarmjackson9 ай бұрын
Check your pushup form. Not great.
@spoonfedstudy9 ай бұрын
Uh oh 😨
@griggiorouge6 ай бұрын
you debunked it perfectly.
@navdhiman11119 ай бұрын
you're not that guy, go to sleep
@MrYsosad8 ай бұрын
safe to say that majority of people fell for the marketing of this book.