The School of Greatness - The Productivity Expert: How to Make 2024 Your Most Productive & ABUNDANT Year Yet | Ali Abdaal
Episode Date: January 8, 2024We often equate productivity with grueling hard work and relentless effort, but Ali Abdaal is about to flip that script. In Feel-Good Productivity, he reveals a refreshing and uplifting approach to su...ccess, one that's rooted in joy and well-being rather than stress and grind.Ali Abdaal is a former doctor turned YouTuber, podcaster, entrepreneur and author. He's been creating YouTube videos for over 7 years and has a following of almost 5 million. Ali became intrigued by the science of productivity while juggling the demands of medical training at Cambridge University with building his business. While working as a doctor in the UK's National Health Service, Ali started to document his journey towards living a healthier, happier, more productive life online. In the years since, Ali's evidence-based videos, podcasts and articles about the human mind have reached hundreds of millions of people all around the world.Buy his new book, Feel-Good Productivity: How to Do More of What Matters to YouIn this episode you will learnA fun mindset shift to tackle stress and anxiety.How to maximize productivity while passive income streams work for you.The crucial distinction between true productivity and the trap of "hustle culture."How feeling good is essential for productivity, even when tackling draining tasks.The power of giving yourself permission to be distracted and its positive impact on productivity.At the beginning of this interview, Ali mentions the last time he was on the show, the discussion he had with Lewis forever changed his life and career trajectory. You can listen to that special interview here - https://link.chtbl.com/1158-podFor more information go to www.lewishowes.com/1557For more Greatness text PODCAST to +1 (614) 350-3960More SOG episodes we think you’ll love:Alex Hormozi: https://link.chtbl.com/1522-podJaspreet Singh: https://link.chtbl.com/1411-podRory Vaden: https://link.chtbl.com/1148-pod
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People feel that the more energy you give,
the more drained you become.
But it's actually not true.
Similarly with work, it's like the more effort
and engagement you give to your work,
that doesn't deplete your energy.
That actually renews your energy.
The most draining thing in the world is coasting,
looking at your clock, being like,
oh God, when is this gonna end?
No one is energized by that.
No one-
Sucks the life out of you.
Sucks the life out of you.
But if you're fully engaged,
if you're like giving it your all,
if you're showing up sincerely rather than seriously,
if you're doing all the things, treating it like play,
lightness at ease, having fun along the way, trying to help people out,
you get home from the end of the day of work feeling more energized than when you started,
even though, counterintuitively, you've been putting a lot of energy into it.
Welcome to the School of Greatness.
My name is Lewis Howes, a former pro athlete turned lifestyle entrepreneur.
And each week
we bring you an inspiring person or message to help you discover how to unlock your inner
greatness.
Thanks for spending some time with me today.
Now let the class begin.
Welcome back, everyone at the School of Greatness.
Very excited about our guest.
We have the inspiring Ali Abdaal in the house.
My man.
Good to see you, brother.
Great to see you.
It's good to see you again.
Very excited about this because two and a half years ago, we had a conversation on the internet
that changed the course of your life.
Genuinely.
That half an hour segment of me being interviewed on your podcast two and a half years ago has
literally single-handedly changed my entire life. It's cool to see it's cool that like i get to be here
in person with you now it's just saying so like here we are it's fun you've got a book out called
feel good productivity how to do more of what what matters to you and this book is going to help a
lot of people and i want to dive into it around productivity, passive income, making money online, identity, and how we can also feel our emotions while also being a productive
human being and not just push our emotions aside by being overproductive constantly.
Absolutely.
So I want to talk about all these things.
The first thing is going into your story about deciding to leave medicine.
Because you started as a doctor and you were building YouTube content on the side,
talking about how to be productive and how to optimize your day and your routine
and things you were learning in medicine and all that stuff.
But then you started making money online and realizing,
oh, I'm actually making really good money online.
More money online than I am as a doctor full-time. And so you started pulling your time down as a
doctor from my memory. And two and a half years ago when I had you on for the first time,
you were still part-time as a doctor, but making a ton of money doing the online marketing, YouTube content, all that stuff. And so what made you decide
and know that it was time to leave medicine, leave being a full-time doctor or even a part-time
doctor to go all in on the side hustle, which was also making way more money than anything
that became the full-time thing. How did you learn to shift your identity to say, okay, this path that I've been on for eight years, I'm going to let go of and go all
in on this other thing that I've been doing on the side? Let's talk about that.
That conversation with you changed my life. Before that conversation, I had been feeling a lot of money anxiety and security anxiety about
my business and about my YouTube channel. And even though it was making like a load of money
at the time, I thought to myself, okay, it's making money right now, but it's sort of like,
I don't know, being an actor or being an athlete or something, like you've got maybe a year or two
or three to really make money. And then at that point you become a has-been and no one cares about you
anymore and like you're sort of washed up and irrelevant and all of those fears were going
going on inside me and so i had this real risk aversion this real fear of like what if i you
know if i leave medicine and go all in this youtube stuff and it doesn't work out what if
i'll end up broken homeless and alone and destitute? And I just had this narrative
running in my mind that there's something about medicine that gives you security and I need a job
for security. And I had never really questioned that until you were questioning me about it.
And what you asked me, you were like, you know, we were, we were actually just running the numbers.
You were asking me how much you're earning in medicine and it was like 40 grand a year you're asking okay and then
when you when you when you fully qualify how much will you be earning and in the uk it's very
different to the us in the uk the consultant would earn 100 grand 100 000 pounds 120 000
something to that effect that's like full-time that's like full-time expert fully expert and if
in your 50s you're doing private practice and you're really good,
then maybe it goes up to 300, 400.
Right.
Whereas in the US,
it's very different.
It's a different sort of equation.
And I was like,
how much are you making a month
right now on YouTube?
And I think you were like,
over 50 grand a month.
Yeah, it was something
more than that.
I was like, wait,
so monthly you're making more
than in a whole year
if you busted your butt
as a doctor in medicine.
And this is just a side thing.
And you were like, yeah, I never thought about that.
And one of the things I find so interesting,
I've listened to that conversation back again so many times,
is that I think a lot of us have these stories about money
and about security and the need for certainty.
A lot of these stories that are actually completely disjointed
from what the reality actually is.
The reality was I was making more money in a month
than I was in a whole year working as a doctor. But in terms of how I felt about money and felt
about security and certainty, I didn't feel that confident about it. And what it took was an outside
perspective, you know, someone with a lot of love and a lot of care to just sort of challenge me on
that for me to realize, wait a minute, actually the story I've told myself, which is that, oh,
I have all this insecurity around money. It's actually a bit of a the story I've told myself, which is that, oh, I have all this
insecurity around money. It's actually a bit of a bull story. And it would, it took you challenging
me to say, look, let's say you lost everything. Let's say no one knew who you were, but you still
had all the skills that you've got. How long would it take you to make a hundred grand? And I think
I said something like, oh, I can do it within two years. You were like, oh, you can do it within
three or six months. And I was like, that's probably true. Cause in the course of building
a YouTube channel, it's not just about the fact that, I don't know, I've got followers on the
internet. Anytime anyone does anything entrepreneurial, you just build a ton of
skills in that thing. And so even if it doesn't work out, worst case scenario, you just get another
job. And now you have all these skills from entrepreneurship. If it doesn't work out,
best case scenario, you just start something else and you use the skills that you've already
developed through the process.
And that was something that you kind of challenged me on.
I was like, before that conversation,
I was so fearful about the money thing,
about losing it all,
about what if all of this comes crumbling down.
Since that conversation, I still feel weird about money. I think it's like, I don't know, a long-term thing
that's hard for one conversation to change.
But speaking to so many people,
there's so many people who I've met in real life
and who've emailed me,
having listened to that conversation
that we had two and a half years ago,
and something in that conversation
resonated with them as well.
Like even though maybe they're not a YouTuber
and maybe they're not making 10 times as much
as they are from their side hustle
as they are from their day job,
I think everyone can relate to this idea
of feeling insecure about money.
Like I don't quite have enough and I'm, I, oh, I should stick it. I should stick at my job a bit
longer because what if I get that next raise? What if I get that next promotion? Because then
I'll feel safe. And I've spoken to people who are decamillionaires who also feel unsafe about money.
So there's like some kind of emotion thing here that's like disjointed from reality.
Where do you think that came from, that fear of money for you originally?
Yeah.
Because you're also making it.
You weren't afraid of making it because you were making it, right?
On the side.
You were making more in a month than you were in a year.
But was it a fear of, I don't want to lose this?
Was it something conditioned you early on that you saw that you were like, oh, this is a scary thing?
I think it was a scarcity mindset growing up.
I think because, you know, my mom is a single mom, raised me and my brother and her mom like kind of single handedly.
We moved countries.
As, you know, immigrant families always have a bit of a scarcity approach about money that, hey, you know, money is this thing we have to hold on to.
It doesn't grow on trees.
You've got to work hard for it.
You've got to save and all this kind of stuff.
hey, you know, money is this thing we have to hold on to.
It doesn't grow on trees.
You've got to work hard for it.
You've got to save and all this kind of stuff.
And so that was an attitude that really served me because it gave me my entrepreneurial spirit
of like wanting to make the money.
But once I got there,
there was a lot of this fear of losing it.
As you said, a lot of this scarcity that like,
yeah, money doesn't grow on trees.
I got very lucky with this YouTube thing.
What if it was just luck?
What if, I don't know, a year from now,
people stop following me anymore for whatever reason, because I become irrelevant. Like,
oh my goodness, what if I no longer make all this money? And all of this stuff around that,
at least I could be a doctor. At least that's a way that I can have value and make some money
and support my family and things like that. So what was your identity like before YouTube? And then what was
your identity like as you started making money on the side on YouTube while you were also full-time
as a doctor? Yeah. So I think before YouTube, I think when I was growing up, my identity was
very tied to academic success because I was really good in school and I got good grades.
Identity was very tied to academic success because I was really good in school
and I got good grades.
But I realized after a few,
after sort of my teenage years of doing that,
that I kind of wanted my identity to be different.
So even in my school years,
I was trying to make money on the side,
trying to build businesses,
trying to make money on the internet,
passive income, all that crap.
Then when I got to university and medical school,
suddenly I no longer had the identity
of being really good in school
because everyone around me was really good in school. And I was bang average. I was like
middle of the class. I was like, wow, okay. I no longer have that thing that's propping up my
self-worth, the fact that I got really good grades. And so I think as we all do, I tried to
find other ways of diversifying my identity. I started a business that I finally succeeded.
And then I was like, oh, cool.
I'm the entrepreneurial guy.
Yeah, all these other students around me,
some of them are really good at sports.
Obviously, they're not going to be great at sports,
but I've got a business.
I'm making money.
This is good.
When I started the YouTube channel,
I got that identity of being a YouTuber.
When I became a doctor,
I got that identity of being a doctor.
There was something weird about the doctor identity
that I clung to for so long, because I think if someone had asked
me, what do I do? I wouldn't have said, I'm an entrepreneur. I'm a YouTuber. I would have said,
I'm a medical student. I'm a doctor. That was the noun that I was using to describe myself.
I've spoken to people since when people ask, what do you do? Some people are like, oh, I enjoy
saying that I'm a lawyer because that gives me, you know, people respect that.
Even the people who work for me now
don't like saying they work for a YouTuber
because there's something low status about that.
They prefer to say, oh, I work in marketing
or, oh, I work in customer success or something like that.
And it's taken a long time for the people in my team
to be actually comfortable with,
yeah, I work for a YouTuber
because they realize it's actually more interesting. If you say you work in marketing, no one has any follow-up questions., yeah, I work for a YouTuber. Because they realize it's actually more interesting.
If you say you work in marketing,
no one has any follow-up questions.
If you say you work for a YouTuber,
huh, that's interesting.
What type of content?
It creates a more interesting conversation.
But I find it so interesting how we're all,
how a lot of us are so tied to the identity
of the thing that we do for work.
And I was so tied to that.
I don't seem to be a doctor.
Yeah.
And you like had pride in it.
It gave you self-worth.
Yeah.
What was it like when you were thinking about leaving being a doctor and just going all in and being a doctor. And you like had pride in it. It gave you self-worth. Yeah. What was it like when you were thinking
about leaving being a doctor
and just going all in and being a YouTuber?
Were you scared about how you would perceive your self-worth
or how others would perceive your self-worth?
I was so scared about how others would perceive it.
Really?
I was so scared that like,
I would be just a YouTuber.
And I had this phrase in my mind
that just a YouTuber is a terrible thing.
I don't want to be just a YouTuber. I want to be the guy who's like a doctor and a YouTuber. And I had this phrase in my mind that just a YouTuber is a terrible thing. I don't want to be just a YouTuber.
I want to be the guy who's like a doctor
and a YouTuber on the side
because that's what gives my content value.
And I had this real fear that,
hey, if I'm not a doctor anymore,
I'm just a dude making videos in his bedroom
about productivity.
That doesn't, hang on,
that feels a bit like not nice
or people won't like it
or people will hate me for leaving medicine
which is an altruistic profession for the sake of making money on the internet i had all these
fears around it um how did you overcome that fear i i sort of broke it down and i realized you know
after our conversation that was a bit catalyst that was when i sort of that was i i did i haven't
practiced a day in medicine since that conversation wow really yeah that conversation changed
everything um do you regret leaving and not practicing anymore absolutely not best decision since that conversation. Wow. Really? Yeah, genuinely. That conversation changed everything.
Do you regret leaving and not practicing anymore?
Absolutely not.
Best decision I've ever made.
Really?
Because as you said, I think at the time,
you said that, hey, what if you devoted
all your headspace to your business
or to your YouTube channel or to teaching,
which is the thing you want to do?
Whereas before, even though I was only working
like a few hours a week,
half of my headspace was like,
should I go back to medicine?
Should I not?
Like the uncertainty,
something you talk about in Greatness Mindset
is a meaningful mission.
In the past, I didn't really have a meaningful mission.
I was sort of torn in multiple directions.
But now I have a meaningful mission.
I feel like the thing that I'm here to do
is to learn cool stuff, synthesize it,
and share it with other people in whatever format.
Wow.
And that's just like so clear for me
that that's what I want to do.
And so when all my focus goes on that,
that's what like the business completely skyrocketed.
Where was the business, you know,
two and a half years ago?
How much were you making a year,
that year prior to then, you know,
how much you make today in the business?
Yeah, so in 2020,
we, I think, did just over a million in revenue.
Is that when we had this conversation?
We had a conversation in 2021.
So I was still doing part-time medicine.
So you were making a million dollars a year.
Yeah.
And you were afraid of leaving, you know, being a doctor for five hours a week.
Yeah.
Well, I made a million dollars that year.
But the year before, it was like 100 grand.
So it was so fluctuating that I was like, well, you know, I'm sure this was a fluke.
Right.
And it was a pandemic and it's like everyone.
So there was all these other stories I was telling myself.
But then 2021,
we did 4 million,
2022,
4.6.
This year we'll do like 5.3,
something like that.
That's great,
man.
Which is pretty cool.
So it's like,
where do you think it'd be if you didn't decide to go all in?
If you were like,
I'm still gonna be a doctor part-time.
Cause I really want to hold on to that. I like the identity. I like the feeling it gives me. I like being able
to help people in medicine a few hours a week. Where do you think your business would be?
I think the business would be a lot less successful than it currently is. Because
it's like the thing, and everyone finds this eventually, that the more you split your focus,
the less progress you make in each individual direction. I still probably would have had fun. But at least for me, once I tasted the freedom of entrepreneurship,
you know, when I was working my five hours a week as a doctor, every half an hour, I was thinking,
why am I doing this? Why am I doing this? Why am I here? Why am I here? I could be in a really
nice WeWork right now with my team, free coffee on tap. You've got to pay for coffee when you're
a doctor. You know, there's a table tennis table've got to pay for coffee when you're a doctor.
You know, there's a table tennis table there.
I could be just, you know, playing ping pong in my breaks.
But instead I'm going to this sort of smelly doctor's office
that smells of mold to have like really unhealthy food
from the hospital canteen from Burger King.
Every half an hour I was like,
why am I here, why am I here, why am I here?
And the answer was because, well, I have to stay being a doctor
because otherwise no one's going to follow my content. I have to have this identity. Wow. So that was the story you were
telling yourself? That was the story I was telling myself that I had to do this because otherwise
I'm worthless if I'm not a doctor and a YouTuber at the same time. Wow. I'm worthless as a YouTuber
and I have self-worth as a doctor plus YouTuber. Where was your self-worth at on a scale of one
to 10 back then when you were working part-time as a doctor and doing YouTube versus where is
your self-worth today?
So two and a half years ago, scale of one to 10, 10 being I have incredible self-worth, not
ego self-worth, but I feel really confident about myself. I love and accept myself. I appreciate
versus a zero being I have zero self-worth. So where were you then the week before we had
that conversation to two and a half years later today?
Great question.
I was probably a seven then, and I'm probably a nine now.
Wow.
Okay.
I think back then, like, yeah, back then I did a lot of questioning around, like, why am I doing this?
Like, what's the path the first few months of like going full-time on YouTube, I had this like,
Oh,
you're thinking of like,
Oh,
have I,
have I made the right decision?
Have I made the right decision?
When I was been two and a half years and I've so,
so settled into that.
And I realized after,
you know,
a lot of the journaling prompts in your book and of writing your own obituary,
I did a few months ago as I was reading it and just made
me realize that no part of me wants to practice medicine and every part of me wants to be a really
good teacher, to be learning, synthesizing and sharing cool stuff and to be a family guy on the
side and to take care of my health and those other things as well. Sure, sure. That's inspiring,
man, because you invested what, six to eight years of your life becoming a doctor,
right? So you put a lot of time, a quarter of your life was invested in this identity.
Yeah. And even before then, even in school, there's like, I knew I was going to be a doctor,
thinking about it, planning for it, like working on it, doing the exams, all for the sake of getting into medical school. Wow. So probably half of your life was involved in thinking about it,
planning about it, working hard to get in medical school, being in medical school,
training as a doctor, being a doctor,
and telling people, I am a doctor.
Absolutely.
Your parents being like, I have this proud,
proud parents and a son who's a doctor, he's made it.
We're safe, we have security, you know,
he's gonna be safe for the rest of his life.
And then you say, well, I'm gonna go be a YouTuber.
Yeah.
So half of your life was committed to this thing
that then you said,
I'm no longer to do. So I can only imagine the amount of fear that comes with letting go of a
half of your life's time and work and around an identity. That's a big fear. So I don't want to
diminish the fear that comes with that and the questioning that might come with that.
And a lot of people probably wouldn't have the courage,
especially because they wouldn't be making the money on the side
that you were making.
It was hard for you even though you were making the money.
Yeah, I was literally making a million on the side
and I was still worried, which kind of says that it's not about the money.
It's about something deeper, some kind of emotion,
some kind of fear around there.
Yes.
Because even if I was making five million on the side,
that wouldn't have changed the story I was telling myself. Yeah. Because. Because even if I was making five million on the side, that wouldn't have changed
the story I was telling myself.
Yeah.
Because I realized the story
I was telling myself was
this is all going to go away
and I have no worth.
I have no worth to the market.
I have no worth to others
unless I'm also a doctor.
Because that was such a narrative.
Wow.
And what it took was like,
you know, you to challenge me
on that to help break.
You were unwinding a lot of it.
You weren't full time.
You were already trying.
You were thinking about it for a year or two.
So I think I just was a mirror to what your higher self really wanted to do.
And you just needed that extra push.
Isn't it fascinating the stories we tell ourselves around identity and how we make decisions based on identity. I think Tony Robbins says that identity
is one of the key factors of success in life.
It's like choosing what identity you want to have.
Yeah.
I was at one of his events the other day
and one of the things that really stuck out
was the strongest force in human personality
is the need to stay consistent with your identity.
And so if you have the identity of being a doctor,
that is the strongest force in your life
is causing you to stay consistent with that if you have the identity of being an unfit person
then every the strongest force and personality is keeping you in line with that if you change
your identity as jim clay talks about to that of a healthy person someone who's in shape someone
who takes care of themselves now the decisions become easier because now you're working with
the identity that you actually want rather than the identity that's kind of pulling you back.
Yeah. So it's really important to decide what identity we want to live in. And daily doing
this. There's this guy on TikTok and Instagram who just did 365 days in the ice tub and he films
it every day. So from day one, you could see the transformation. It's incredible.
From day one, he's like,
I'm not in a good place mentally, physically.
You can see he's got 30 pounds overweight.
He's let life slip by.
He's married.
He's got kids.
He's got a job,
but he doesn't have a positive identity.
He's just kind of showing up.
And he decided to do this challenge.
Just literally 365 days yesterday,
he completed it. And every single day, he shot a video of him getting into like one degree Celsius
ice tub. And he would say a message every day about what's coming up for him. And he got better
over time. You could see the first few months he struggled. Then he became a pro and you started
to see his body transform.
He started to take notice in his health, his mindset, his decisions every day.
And he said, I'm a guy who's going to do this every single day for 365 days.
His entire life changed because of that commitment, that identity.
And so we've got to be thinking about our identity around all things, relationships,
health, money, career, all that stuff.
And that's cool. What else did you learn that opened up from you
from the event with Tony recently that stood out to you
based on the reflection of the last couple of years?
Yeah, yeah, just one point before on the ice, I think.
I really like that idea,
this idea that in order to change our identity,
often all we need to do is commit to doing one small thing for this guy was the ice i stopped it's not small it's kind of kind of
painful the first time i went on was it was painful as hell the fingers feel like they're
going to freeze off yeah and similarly some of us well one of my one of my friends and team members
tintin started doing cold showers recently and he's into this sort of stuff so he was like weirdly
when i start my day with a cold shower, it helps embody the identity that I am the
sort of person who does hard things. And that, that bleeds into other areas of your life. And
some people, you know, make that point of like, oh, if you want to get in shape, it's not about
exercise, it's about the diet. But, you know, as Peter Atiyah would say, actually, the exercise is
the keystone habit that like all of everything else flows from that. Because you are the sort of person that exercises every day you are also the sort of
person that starts doing these other healthy habits just to stay consistent with that identity
um and so this is partly why you know when it comes to youtube i personally believe that like
posting what something every week or with a blog or a newsletter posting it every week there's
something about that where just the act of doing it every week helps you stay consistent with the identity that you want.
Another big thing I learned from the Tony Robbins event was this,
I think one of the exercises,
essentially this event was just a lot of journaling prompts.
This is what I realized.
Like on a meta level, all these Tony Robbins events are,
or any of these like personal development seminars, because I've seen a few videos of them,
I've attended a few. It's not someone telling you how to live your life. It's someone encouraging
you to do the journaling and reflection to think about how you want to live your life.
Yes.
And so one of the prompts, they do the thing, lights down, eyes closed,
inspiring background music, and he's doing his little guided meditation.
One of the most powerful ones for me was imagining what is the story that you,
what's been the story of your life so far? And you know, the story of my life so far is a story
about dot, dot, dot. What's the story. And then from now, the story of my life will be a story
about dot, dot, dot. And I realized after doing doing this that the story of my life so far
has been a story
about serving the self.
It's been a story of,
to use David Brooks metaphor,
climbing the first mountain.
The first mountain
is the mountain of achievement,
of success,
of freedom,
of optionality,
of autonomy,
of pride,
of fame.
I want all of these things,
all of these options.
I want all this freedom.
I want to be able to quit my job.
I want to have all this money so that I can, I don't know, whatever.
Travel the world.
Travel the world.
Be flexible.
All that kind of stuff.
The flexibility aspect of it.
And David Brooks' book, The Second Mountain, is really good because what it talks about
is that as you're climbing this first mountain, usually in your 20s in your 20s or whatever, sometimes 30s,
sometimes 40s, sometimes teens, it depends on different people or different stages of the
process. As you're climbing the mountain, one of three things will happen. Either you'll get to the
top and realize, huh, okay. Or you'll get knocked off the mountain by either you having some sort of
crisis or someone close to you having some sort of health crisis or like trauma or anything like that. And then you get into the valley. And in the valley was when you're like
feeling a bit like meaningless, purposeless, aimless, and all this kind of stuff. But in the
valley is when you realize that there is a second mountain. And that's not the mountain of the self.
That's the mountain of service. That's the mountain of commitment, of committing yourself to
a spouse or a family or a community or a faith or a philosophy.
Or a cause, yeah.
Or all of the above.
And that's where you realize that actually freedom buys happiness, sure, in the short term, but it doesn't buy joy.
Wow.
Freedom actually kind of sucks because if you're just free, then you're like, well,
I can do whatever.
And then you feel that meaninglessness of like, well, so what should I do?
I don't really know.
But actually aligning with something you
really care about committing yourself to a spouse or family all this all this kind of stuff that's
the mount that's the second mountain and it's a harder mountain to climb and it's not filled with
so much dopamine and so much excitement but it's filled with like lasting joy and so i've read i
read that book this year and this tony robbins event like really put that metaphor for me because
i i realized that my story so far was about climbing the first mountain and what I want my story to be moving forward
is to work on the second that's beautiful man I think um I saw some clip of like Dan Bilzerian
I think online um and I'm going to paraphrase it where he was like you know it seemed fun and
exciting for a while to like be able to sleep with every woman in the world that you wanted to and
have all this money and just gamble all the time and like shoot guns and do it out
all these cool exciting things but then it becomes very empty becomes very lonely you know kind of
meaningless after you do all those things yeah and um you know it sounds a lot like this second
mountain you know it's like climb it's like okay climb the first mountain you do these things sure
you can have a fun life but is it fulfilling and fun does not always mean meaningful like you said it's like yeah you have
freedom and i'm traveling the world and doing these things but then you ask what is the purpose
of my life why am i here and what do i want to be known for or remembered for or you know who
really cares about me who's in my corner um And I think it's kind of learning that balance
of how do I enjoy and have fun in my life
but also have meaning at the same time.
It sounds more like the second mountain theory.
And going after that, we're both kind of in that same stage, I think.
Yeah.
You've gotten engaged recently.
That removes optionality from your life.
It does.
And it's thinking of like, okay,
what's our vision for the family we're creating?
Okay, we want to have kids one day.
We want to get married, all these different things.
And what will life look like for the next 10, 20 years?
It's kind of visioning in the future that far.
If you're going to choose to get married
with the intention of having kids,
you've got to plan 20 years in
the future in a sense. And you have to realize how can I continue to live a life that I want
knowing that I'm going to need to be, if I want to be a great human being or a great man or a
great person, I also want to show up fully and presently for my partner, my kids, and the
responsibilities that I have from there.
So it's almost shedding an old identity and stepping into a new identity.
It's similar to you.
You had to shed an old identity of I'm this doctor,
and this is what I'm known for to becoming a new identity.
And that's an interesting perspective.
Are there more than two mountains in this book?
No, I think there are just two. The first mountain is like chasing success and fame
and accomplishment and freedom and flexibility.
The second one is really going after meaning,
it sounds like.
Yeah.
Service.
Meaning and service.
That's my whole book about the greatness mindset,
which is really about stepping into service.
Yeah, that's one of the things I like.
When I read that,
I slowly worked my way through it over the last four months or so,
kind of doing it.
It's quite a heavy book.
It's like so many exercises.
And initially, I was like, oh, it's just a personal thought.
I read it for a living.
I'm going to blitz through it.
And then I was like, oh, hang on.
I need to do my GPA.
OK, crap.
I should take better care of my health.
OK, cool.
Next one, it's like write your obituary.
Oh, man, that's heavy.
Figure out your three Ps and all that kind of stuff.
Have you never done the obituary have you ever done that exercise
I thought about it I thought about it from the context
of what do I want written on my gravestone
which was I was
born as a good father good husband a good teacher
and so I had a sense
but it took when I wrote it
out as like a three paragraph thing there was something about
writing it out in obituary style
that made it land and like
I think also when you do the exercise matters, because it's like, if I'd done the
exercise when I was in my early twenties, I'd have been like, I'd have been again, optimizing
freedom.
Right.
Right.
One of the other things that Tony talks about is, and this was just like a throwaway thing
that he said, it wasn't even part of the event officially.
It was around like core values.
And he said that when he was young,
freedom was his core value.
And he realized that actually,
the more you focus on trying to acquire freedom,
the less free you are.
And I was like, oh, that's interesting because that vibes exactly with my experience.
I've been chasing freedom for my entire 20s.
Like the whole reason of starting this business,
building the YouTube channel, all this stuff.
Financial freedom, time freedom.
Location freedom, all that kind of stuff. But I would have one thing on my calendar.
A few months ago, I'd have one thing on my calendar. I'd be thinking, oh, I'm not truly
free because I've got one thing on my calendar. I'd be having a meeting with my team and I'd be
like, I love hanging out with my team. It's great vibes. But I'd be thinking, oh, the fact that it's
on the calendar means I'm not truly free.
Really?
So by obsessing about freedom, I actually became a lot less free. Whereas what Tony Robbins was
saying was like, when you spend, when you, when you, instead of, instead of focusing on the self,
you focus on service and you're like, how can I serve in the best way possible? You become free
as a result of taking the focus away from the self and putting it onto others. And I was like, that's good.
Yeah, it is. Now for people watching or listening, thinking this all sounds great,
but how do I make money? And how do I stay productive without obsessing over
hustle culture and burning myself out? How do I make money, create passive income without burnout
and feeling like I'm exhausting
myself?
Yeah.
What is your thoughts on that?
My thoughts on that are-
And before you get into that, how did you start making money, I guess, passively?
Do you remember the first $100 you made, when that was, what that was?
And then how has your passive income journey evolved?
Yeah. and then how has your passive income journey evolved? Yeah, so over the last 15 years of my life,
I have tried so many attempts to make money on the internet.
When I was 13, I was a freelance web designer
trying to do web development on the side.
I started my own web design studio.
I was a kid in his bedroom, but I called it a studio
because I thought it would be more legit.
I tried making video games.
I learned how to program.
I emailed Nintendo and Blizzard Entertainment
and authors that I liked being like,
hey, can I turn your content into a video game?
They all said no, or they just ignored me.
I built an affiliate marketing site where I was doing,
there was a game StarCraft 2 that had just come out.
Some guy was selling a guide.
There was a 50% affiliate deal on that guide.
And I was like, if I build a WordPress site,
then people, I'll SEO rank for Protoss build orders,
and then I'll be able to sell that affiliate site.
I tried building a multi-level marketing pyramid scheming type website that would get people to sign up for free trials of stuff and cancel them so that they could get credit towards the games console.
I tried building a forum that was helping kids learn martial arts and lockpicking so they could become spies because that was really cool when I was a teenager.
I tried those like six or seven business ideas when i was in school and the one that finally
succeeded was when uh i was 18 i was in my first year of med school and i'd lost a bunch of money
because some dude scammed me out of a macbook air so i lost my life savings of a thousand dollars
wow and i decided i need to build a business to recoup these losses. And so I made a, I still have the Evernote file from 2012
where I was like, what am I good at?
I'm good at teaching.
I did well in the med school exams
and I know how to make websites.
I was like, how do I combine these three things
to make a business?
And so I made a business teaching people courses
on how to get into med school
and made a nice website to go with it.
And then that business did 10K in year one,
100K in year two, 150K in year three.
And that was when I, initially I was doing all the work. And then I realized that 10K in year one, 100K in year two, 150K in year three. And that was when I, you know, initially I was doing all the work.
And then I realized that the way to get passive income once I read the four-hour work week
is to find a way to get other people to do that work.
I think a lot of people try to go for passive income immediately.
It's really hard to go for passive income immediately.
Usually you have to go for very active income.
And then over time you passivify it a little bit.
Right.
So this was...
You still have to show up and do some work. You have to do a lot of work to get the thing going and once it's going
it's like okay cool now you build systems and processes operations delegation outsourcing all
of that fun stuff to make it a little bit more fun stuff for you but not for everyone it's not
for everyone yeah you love that stuff i love that stuff but i also think you know part of the
philosophy of feel-good productivity is that whatever you're doing find a way to make it fun
because the things that you find fun are the things you will do for a long time you just have to do this
for a very long time i think most people quit way too early yes most people either don't get started
because they're afraid or they get started and they quit too early like i was looking at some
stats like over 50 of podcasts don't make it past episode three another like 80 of podcasts don't
make it past episode 20 wow you've hit've hit like your 1,000th episode or something.
Over 1,500.
1,500 now.
Bloody hell.
10 years, 1,500 episodes every single week for 10 years.
Yeah.
And you just don't quit?
Just consistently.
Yeah.
And I'm not the smartest and I'm not the most talented and I'm not the most innovative,
but it's like when you try to get a little bit better every single week and do your best
to get a little bit better and you do it consistently either it's going to work or maybe after a few years you're in the wrong position
it's the wrong profession yeah it's like learning okay maybe this isn't working and i haven't figured
it out yet after a few years okay cool yeah but i think actually on on that note what i would say
is either it works or it or you realize it's not working and you change your plan yes so it's like
when it's like the thing you
talk about in Meaningful Mission, when you know where you want to go, then that's like the most
important thing. Like, where do I actually want to go? Let's say, I don't know, my goal is to make
10K a month in passive income. Okay, cool. That's a destination. Now, what are the three to five
chess moves that right now I think will get me there? There's something Hormozy talked about
in a recent video or a recent keynote or something.
And I really like this approach.
It's like, you've got a destination in mind
and you know where you are now.
That creates potential energy
because now there's where you are
and where you want to be.
It's like going on a voyage or whatever.
Now, either you know how you're going to get there
or you don't know how you're going to get there.
If you don't know how you're going to get there,
you have an information problem.
You need more information.
If I was like, oh, damn, geez, I really don't know how you're going to get there. If you don't know how you're going to get there, you have an information problem. You need more information. If I was like, oh, damn, geez,
I really don't know how to build more muscle.
I have an information problem.
I should watch a couple of videos
and I'll realize very quickly,
progressive overload, weightlifting three times a week.
Yeah, yeah.
That's about it.
Eating more calories and protein.
Yeah, all of that stuff.
It's like there are three to five things
that if you just do,
will probably get you to that destination.
So if you don't know the path to get to where you want to go,
you just ask people, you read about it,
and you figure it out.
It's the internet.
Anyone can figure it out.
Information should not be the problem.
But if you know what the path is,
now you can figure out, okay,
what's the most effective path to get there?
And what's holding me back?
What's the fear, the insecurity holding me back?
Exactly.
What's the story that I'm telling myself?
What are the obstacles that are getting in the way of that?
What are the monsters
that Leviathans need to slay
along the way to my journey?
So if someone was like
listening to this
and they're like,
okay, I know I want to be
a podcaster like Lewis
and I know 10 years from now
I want to say I've had 1,500 episodes.
It's like, okay, cool.
How much money do you want to make?
Like, let's like really define
the destination
and figure out where we want to go.
And then maybe they start off
doing solo episodes
just talking to their phone
in vertical
and they do that
for like a couple of months and they see zero traction. They're like, hmm, my plan, which off doing solo episodes, just talking to their phone in vertical. And they do that for like a couple of months.
And they see zero traction.
They're like, hmm, my plan,
which was do solo episodes every single day
and hope that that gets me to a School of Greatness podcast.
That plan's not working.
Let's change the plan.
Let's try something else.
And then they'll try something else.
And let's try something else.
Let's try something else.
Let's try something else.
And eventually, you know,
this is something I think that Jeff Bezos wrote about this
in one of his shareholder letters to Amazon.
It was like, it was using the analogy of baseball.
I don't do baseball because I'm from the UK, but I understand the principles,
which is that in baseball, you either strike out or you hit a single or two or three or four.
The most you can get is a home run, where it's like four points.
But in the world of entrepreneurship, sure, you might strike out a few times.
But actually, if you hit a home run, that home run can get you a million points.
There is no cap to how many points you can get from the home run. And so if you figure,
if you know where you want to go and you just keep on trying until you start making progress
in that direction, there's like no world in which you're not going to be successful at the thing.
It's like, you know, yeah, fine. If you're like four foot eight and you're trying to go to the
NBA, then okay, fine. Maybe, you know, some people will tell you that, bro, your strategy is just very unlikely to get you there. Maybe you need to coach. You can still be in the arena and you're trying to go to the nba then okay fine maybe you know some people will tell you that bro your strategy is just very unlikely to get you there maybe you need to coach
maybe you can still be in the arena that you're wanting to get to yeah if you don't want to if
you can't be a player maybe you can be a coach or an owner or manager yeah still playing the game
you just got to shift the the role you're playing exactly yeah there's there's a whole strategy i've
got around this which is not in the book but I've sort of developed this over the last few months. And I was like, damn, I should put it in the book. And it's GPS, goal, plan, system.
What's a goal? What's a plan to get there? And what's the system to make sure you execute on
the plan? And I think when it comes to building a business, making passive income, starting a
podcast, like getting married, like all of this stuff, fundamentally, you have a goal,
you have a plan, i.e. the moves you think will get you there, and you have a system to make sure you
follow it. And if you're struggling with any of these, it's either a problem have a goal, you have a plan, i.e. the moves you think will get you there, and you have a system to make sure you follow it.
And if you're struggling with any of these,
it's either a problem with a goal,
you don't know what you want,
or it's wildly unrealistic and never going to happen,
or it's a problem with a plan,
i.e. the strategy you're employing is actually not effective,
or it's a problem with a system.
You know where you want to go and what you need to do,
you're just not doing it.
So let's figure out a way to help you do it.
That's interesting.
I was having a conversation actually right before you came here
with Alexandra on my team about the idea of being an entrepreneur, passive income,
hustle culture, all these different things. And I was telling her, sometimes when people want to
launch a side hustle or a side project or thinking about becoming an entrepreneur,
they're really good at one skill. But the challenge is being an entrepreneur, you have to learn lots of skills. And that's usually what holds people back. Okay,
I really like doing graphic design, but now I'm launching a business and I have to learn sales,
customer support, refunding people. I need to learn how to build a website and checkout card and
accounting and taxes and all these other things, manage employees. It's like you have to learn
a plethora of skills around being an entrepreneur.
And then I think sometimes is what holds people back from being consistent.
They go in because they have one skill that they're really good at, but you have to learn so many other things that you don't enjoy. So how do we learn to make productivity fun and enjoyable
when 90% of the time you're doing things that aren't your number one skill
set, the thing you're really good at as an entrepreneur? Yeah. Oh, great question. Okay.
Because you were talking about this before, but how do we really make all the unenjoyable things
enjoyable in order to keep going? Yeah. Okay. This is like the ultimate secret. Like the secret to
all productivity is to find a way to make the process feel enjoyable. If you can just do that,
you know, you enjoy doing podcast episodes.
This is why you've been able to continue doing it for literally 10 plus years and 1500 episodes.
I enjoy making videos, making YouTube videos.
Not every aspect of that is enjoyable.
And certainly there are days where I don't enjoy it.
You clearly enjoy working out more than I do, which is why you're in better shape than I am.
You know, there's something about the process that you found a way to make fun.
And so my whole journey of productivity has been to try and figure out
what are the ways that we can make
that we have to do a little bit more fun.
And I've pretty much boiled it down to three things.
Play, power, and people.
The three Ps, I call them the three energizers.
Play, power, and people.
And if you can incorporate some
or some of these into whatever you're doing,
I guarantee it will be way more enjoyable and you'll have more fun along the way.
It will be more sustainable.
It will be more energizing.
You'll be more productive.
You'll be more creative.
You'll be less stressed.
All of the good things will happen. Can you give an example of each one, what that looks like for something that you don't enjoy doing and how you incorporate these three energizers?
Sure.
So let's use a business example because I know a lot of your audience wants to do business. When I started my first business, well, my first successful business,
it was actually my eighth business. This was sort of selling real life seminars to help people get
into med school. We would use Eventbrite for like the ticketing. And then I would have to figure out
how to get that into like a Google Sheet. And there was a lot of admin involved in like Google
Sheet formulas and like making sure the emails are being sent on time and making sure that like get that into like a google sheet and there was a lot of admin involved in like google sheet formulas
and like making sure the emails are being sent on time and making sure that like the logistics of
ordering course booklets have been sent to the hotel in time for the event and that dhl doesn't
cook the delivery like they often do whatever the thing might be a lot of boring admin work that
required just sending a lot of emails and being on the phone with hotels this is not my skill set i
do not enjoy admin i don't think think, I think very few people,
actually, there are some people I know who just love organizing things and love admin.
I absolutely hated that stuff. So I was like, how do I find a way to make this a little bit more fun?
So play, power, and people. Play is when we'd find a way to approach our work in the spirit of play.
Unfortunately, these are only strategies that I discovered later. I wish I discovered them
when I was in the first business as well, because that was a bit of a grind. But if
I had, if I were to have that situation now, how might I approach that in the spirit of
play? Sometimes even just asking that question is enough. But generally play is where one
of the things that stops play from happening is when the stakes feel too high. So like
Roger Federer is not feeling playful when
he's playing Wimbledon finals, especially when he's defending his title. That's a high stakes
situation. They've done some really cool studies in rats where they, you know, rats like often play
with each other and they'll measure how many times they're playing with like, you know, biting the
nape of the neck and like roaming around and doing all that and then they will inject the rats with uh
adrenaline or cortisol like stress hormones uh or they'll like stress the rat out a little bit
by putting them in a cage for a bit and taking the cage off and they'll see what happens to play
behavior and unsurprisingly when a rat is stressed the play behavior gets reduced people don't play
when they're stressed it's like when you're stressed you're like survival mode like what
yeah you you very much narrow your range of options you get laser focused and you start
taking things very seriously and it tends to drain your energy and it's not fun so one of the big
things is like how do we make this thing feels like feel less stressful how do we lower the
stakes and one of my favorite phrases um or mindset shifts is from the philosopher alan watts and something that he says
is be sincere not serious i think a lot of us when you know when i was doing my admin for this google
sheets and like the all this guy was taking it very seriously i'm like oh my god if this email
doesn't get sent out then all these people are going to be unhappy it's like what what's going
to happen is going to happen either way i can choose to approach it very seriously or i can
approach it sincerely.
Sincerely is where I recognize
that this is an important thing,
but I also recognize it's not the end of the world.
I can just choose to approach it
with a bit more lightness and ease.
Because the thing is,
what I realized about productivity is that,
and life, is that a lot of our experience
is about the story we tell ourselves
and the thing that we focus on.
If I'm telling myself the story that this thing I have to do is enormously important.
Oh my God, I'm on this podcast, such high stakes.
Luis has such a big audience.
Oh my God, I haven't said the right thing.
Oh yeah.
I go into myself.
It's less fun.
It's not going to be in flow.
I'm not going to be in flow.
But generally, if anyone watching this or listening to this, if you think of the times
where you've performed the best, it's probably been when you've been in flow,
when you've been feeling good,
when you've been feeling energized.
I mean, what about when the stakes are high, though?
Like when there is life or death,
when you are a doctor and you've got to deliver a baby
or something happens where you're like,
I can't just be goofing around and playing the whole time.
I've got to actually take my time seriously
and show credibility.
Even then.
So I've been in operating theaters quite a lot
in life and death, open heart surgery, brain surgery,
obstetrics, baby, mom bleeding out,
all that I was doing in med school,
I was doing as a doctor.
Even when life and death is in the balance,
one thing that's interesting is in operating rooms,
there's often upbeat background music playing
because surgeons realize
and the staff working in theater realize
that actually having background music
and having that sense of like lightness and ease
when it comes to,
even when life and death is hanging in the balance,
actually helps you perform better.
It's like surgeons are cracking jokes
when they're in the middle of life-saving operations.
They're sort of being sort of friendly and smart,
like the good surgeons.
They have to be.
If you're like tense and rigid,
you're going to be,
you're probably more prone to make a mistake.
I've worked with so many surgeons who are like that.
And the, you know, there's a,
there's screaming at you, give me this and give me this. And you're like, ah, you're terrible.
And the, and then I think this was in the checklist manifesto by Atul Gawande talking about like,
um, human factors, errors in hospitals where like the surgeons operating on the wrong leg, but no one wants to say anything because the environment is like a stress and everyone,
everyone's thinking, I'm pretty sure you were meant to amputate the right leg oh my gosh but like
oh no i can't say anything because it's the big boss so it's when you have this atmosphere of
like high stakes and pressure and stress it's mental this is why now there's checklists in
operations where it's like mark the leg with a sharpie are you operating on the right limb
make sure the patient knows
you're operating on that limb because they'll tell you if you're not a lot of it there's there
are so many instances where when we feel pressured and stressed we actually don't perform very well
and we don't raise concerns when concerns need to be raised so having a light-hearted atmosphere
you know some surgeons scrub nurses will wear like a rainbow colored scrub cap because it just makes it lighten it up. So even when life and death is in the balance,
lightening it up is actually the way to perform better. Interesting. Okay. Be sincere, but not
serious. Exactly. Okay. The other thing on play, you know, one thing I really loved,
very practical thing back when I, at the moment I'm like digital nomading around the world. And
so I don't have a desk, but when I used to have a desk with a computer monitor on it,
I had a post-it note on the bottom of my monitor.
And on that post-it note was written,
what would this look like if it were fun?
What would this look like if it were fun?
Anyone can do this.
If you are ever doing anything at all,
and you find yourself feeling stressed or feeling anxious
or feeling like the stakes are too high
or like, oh, I want to be more productive in this thing,
but it's really hard or procrastinating.
You take a step back, you take a breath
and you ask yourself,
what would this look like if it were fun?
And usually you can come up with some pretty good answers.
Maybe I'd have some background music.
Maybe I'd lighten up a bit.
Maybe I'd, I don't know,
bring some of my friends along for the ride.
Maybe I'll just choose to take it
a little bit less seriously.
There's so much value in lowering the stakes.
The other thing, again, on the play front,
like a really cool, there was a really cool thing
that there's a YouTuber called Mark Rober.
He used to work for NASA, then he used to work at Apple,
and now he does like science educational videos.
He's amazing.
He did a really fun experiment where he was,
he did this experiment where he was trying to teach people how to code.
And so he got 50,000 people in his audience, different ages,
different walks of life to do this online experiment, learning how to code.
And they got this like robot maze that they had to program to program a robot
to go through the maze.
And the trick was, this was an impossible task.
There was no way to actually do this,
but he split the groups up into two halves, half the group. Every time they failed, they got, they was an impossible task. There was no way to actually do this. But he split the groups up into two halves.
Half the group, every time they failed,
they got an error message saying,
you failed, please try again.
The other half got an error message saying,
you have failed, you have lost five points.
You now have 195 points.
Please try again.
Everything else was the same.
The puzzle was impossible.
The only thing different,
the only difference was that group two
lost five points. The points are completely made up. Like no lost five points the points are completely made up like no one cares what the
points are like they have no idea but actually if you looked at the number of attempts they made to
solve the puzzle actually i don't think it was impossible probably i think it was able to be
solved but if you look at the number of attempts they made how many shots on goal they had
the group that got that lost the five points had less than half as many attempts as the group that
didn't lose any points at all.
Because they were afraid to lose more.
They were afraid to lose points.
And so Mark Rober gave a really good TED talk about this where he explained this experiment.
And he says, like, if we could just, what if we reframed our, what if we reframed how we think about failure?
What if we thought of it as a scientist does, as, oh, it's just an experiment.
It didn't work this time.
Maybe it will work next time.
Even if it didn't work, I'll get data.
What if we just stopped worrying so much about the concept of failure? And what if we started to treat it's just an experiment. It didn't work this time. Maybe it will work next time. Even if it didn't work, I'll get data. What if we just stopped worrying so much
about the concept of failure?
And what if we started to treat it more like an experiment?
That's another thing that helps you play if you are so worried
about failure.
Yes, in some context, life and death.
OK, fine.
But most people listening to this
are not dealing with life and death every single day.
They're probably not, realistically.
In most contexts where it's not life and death,
a fear of failure really it really holds you back
from feeling good about the thing.
It's hard to deal with, easier said than done,
but if we can, I really like this idea of reframing it
as an experiment, as a learning opportunity.
People know this stuff,
but I think the reminders often really help.
It's such a good reminder, man.
What about power?
How do we use power in this situation
of something you don't enjoy doing?
Yeah, okay.
So we talked about how, you know,
within entrepreneurship, you might be really good at design, but you might suck at sales
and marketing and copywriting and accounting and legal and HR and all that crap that you have to
deal with as an entrepreneur. The concept of power is that when we feel powerful in doing anything,
it makes it feel good. It makes it more intrinsically motivating. We do it for the sake of doing the thing.
It makes it more rewarding, makes it more energizing.
And you notice this in video games.
In video games, there's this sense of like an experience bar.
And the more monsters you kill, the more XP you gain.
And then you level up and you get more power.
You get more powerful.
And then you do more things.
And you get more confident and all these different things.
All of the different stuff.
And so video game designers know that like a video game is kind of boring.
People just sit there
and just like twiddle some things around
and kill fake monsters on screen.
But one of the ways they make it fun
is by helping you feel powerful.
This is partly why, you know,
all of the good stories,
like Star Wars,
Anakin Skywalker starts off as a kid
racing drones in Tatooine.
And then over time,
you see his power
gain. You see his journey of becoming a legend and then turning to the dark side and stuff.
In the Mistborn series by Brandon Sanderson, incredible series of books, you get these
characters, they start off young, they start off inexperienced, they learn, they grow. Like,
we love following stories where someone is becoming more powerful over time. If they're
powerful to begin with, kind of like, you know, we need some kind of challenge. Like, most stories
don't start with the main character being a legend already. It's usually a, they're powerful to begin with, kind of like, you know, we need some kind of challenge. Like most stories don't start with the main character
being a legend already.
It's usually a, they're a bit of a dweeb,
but over time, Mr. Miyagi comes along
and teaches them the thing and they learn
and Rocky like doing all this training.
You know, we love that.
Similarly, it works for ourselves.
When we can experience a sense of power
with what we're doing,
a sense that I'm getting better at the thing.
Maybe it's like, I don't enjoy marketing right now because I suck at it. But let me try and read
Dotcom Secrets by Russell Brunson. Let me try and read $100 million offers by Alex Formosi. Let me
just try and apply some of these methods. Oh, hang on. That thing actually worked. I now get how to
build a funnel. Oh, that's fun. That's cool. Like that sense of accomplishment and achievement is
one of the things that makes us feel powerful, which drives us to feel intrinsically motivated to do stuff. And so you could, again, it's the
same thing. You could choose to approach creating a landing page with, oh, it's not my skillset. Oh
God, I'll have to write this landing page. Or you could approach writing a landing page with,
wow, it's not my skillset. I get to learn this new thing. Let me figure out how I can do this.
Let me get better at the thing. Man so it's so good you're saying this because for 20 years i've been trying
to learn spanish on and off not like every day obsessed with it but i'm like okay i'm going to
pick up a spanish learning book or try an app or get a tutor or whatever it is off and on for like
20 years since high school right just like and i always felt like it was hard. And it wasn't until about six months ago
where it started to shift,
where Martha, my fiancee, was like,
you got to look at it as an experiment more
and play with it.
Like, really play the game of being fascinated
by why it is that way.
As opposed to saying, okay, in English,
we have a structure of sentences,
and it's almost complete opposite
sometimes in Spanish. And I'm always like, why do they do that? Why don't they just make it the
same way in English? So I can speak it in, I guess, in the same order, as opposed to have to
flip-flop everything. And she goes, you got to start looking at it like a game and just saying,
wow, isn't that fascinating that they do this? It's so interesting and so fascinating and keep it more lighthearted.
So she's been helping me play more
and we're doing games now
and we're doing flashcards
and making like games with points.
And it's like interesting as opposed to,
and I feel like I'm learning faster now
because I'm not saying, why is it this way?
I'm saying how, why,
it's so fascinating that it is this way.
Let me learn more about that.
Let me learn why in an interesting way as opposed to a frustrating way. Yeah, it's so fascinating that it is this way. Let me learn more about that. Let me learn why in an interesting way,
as opposed to a frustrating way.
Yeah.
It's exactly the same scenario,
but just changing the way that you approach it changes everything.
Yeah.
That's cool.
The other cool thing about power.
So, but part of power as well is the idea of, you know,
we feel powerful when we have control over stuff.
This is why we enjoy decorating our bedrooms when we're kids,
decorating our houses.
Like we, we, we don't like our autonomy being taken away. We like feeling empowered in
that sense. And so a lot of people will say, well, I don't have control over what my boss is asking
me to do. It's like, okay, you might not have control over what you're having to do, but you
usually have control over how you're going to do it. You know, when I was working as a doctor,
I used to have to write a lot of these discharge letters. These are kind of boring.
Boring. Boring. Exactly. You have to trawl was working as a doctor, I used to have to write a lot of these discharge letters. These are kind of boring. Boring, it takes time.
Exactly.
You have to trawl through,
sometimes handwritten notes.
Old school hospitals,
no electronic record system,
trawling through handwritten notes
to be like, okay.
Trying to decipher the handwriting.
You're in a doctor's office,
it's tiny,
the computer's,
there's no air conditioning
because the NHS doesn't have any money.
Bad lighting.
Yeah, all of this kind of,
God, okay,
I'm just going to write this discharge letter
again and again and again.
You're like, I didn't become a doctor to do this.
Exactly, yeah.
That's not my skill set.
This is what burns a lot of people out.
It's like the fact that you have to do this.
Obviously, someone's got to write the discharge letter.
As the junior doctor, you're going to be the one doing it, obviously.
And so in just taking that scenario, I realized something really cool about writing discharge letters.
I said, I could just change the way I did it.
I had no control over what I had to do.
Someone's got to write the discharge letter.
But I had control over how I did it.
So what I started to do is I brought a little Bluetooth speaker into the office, taped it to the ceiling with like a little string type thing.
And I would just play the Pirates of the Caribbean or Lord of the Rings or Harry Potter movie soundtracks in the background while doing it.
And initially I was like, oh, isn't this unprofessional? And then I realized, who cares?
Forgiveness rather than permission. The seniors would come in and then they'd be like, oh,
that's a cool idea. And they'd walk out again. No one cares. It's like, it's fine. But just
having concerning hobbits from the Lord of the Rings playing in the background while I'm writing
a discharge letter makes it feel like I'm a hobbit on an adventure in the shire. And that was cool.
The other thing with discharge letters is I found a way to inject a little bit of humor into them. So these are technically legal
documents that could be called on in court by a coroner or anything like that. But there's no law
saying that you have to be like boring with it. So occasionally I'd say things like, you know,
I knew that the patient supported Manchester United, the football team. So I'd say, you know,
at the end of the note, because these are discharge letters that you write to the doctor,
their general practitioner on the other end.
Say, P.S., while we're delighted that Mr. Jones made a speedy recovery,
we wish him commiserations
for Chelsea's recent performance in the exam.
Something basic like that.
But you know that at some moment,
someone might read that and they might get a giggle.
Yeah, exactly.
So you're like, okay,
how can I make someone else's day when they read this? That's the one. And actually that point of how
do I make someone, so there's kind of two things here. One is it makes it fun for me because I've
created this challenge for myself. Challenge is another one of those things that makes stuff a
bit more fun. Even if the thing is boring, if you can create some sort of arbitrary challenge,
like let me do this and let me do this faster. Let me do this slower. Let me find a shortcut.
Let me challenge myself to dot, dot, dot. That makes it way more fun. But also if you can find a way to connect it to someone else,
this is the third P, people. If you can find a way to help someone through the thing, even if it's in
a really tiny way, whether it's making them laugh or whether it's in the middle of seeing a bunch
of patients, you're spending 30 seconds just asking the nurses, can I make you a cup of tea?
That makes their day. You feel the help is high because you feel good. Both parties feel energized. Life is good. You can always take 30 seconds to make someone a cup of tea that makes their day you feel the helpers high because you feel good both parties feel energized life is good you can always take 30 seconds to make someone come
yeah yeah one of my favorite stories from when i was doing interviews for the book
um there's a guy called matthew dicks who's now an author and he's written some amazing books
um but back in the day in his 20s he used to work at mcdonald's and he hated working mcdonald's
it's grim he was working in like you know burger flipper initially and then he used to work at McDonald's and he hated working at McDonald's. It was grim. He was working in like, you know, burger flipper initially. And then he graduated to the drive-thru. And one thing
he said, he was like, yeah, working at McDonald's was really boring, but I found a way to challenge
myself to make it fun. So what he would do is he would try and upsell a different sauce every day
of the week. So Monday was barbecue sauce day. And every time someone would come through the
drive-thru, would you like fries with that? And I'm like, yeah, no. How about some barbecue sauce?
And then, and they'd be like, huh? Um, no, I'm good barbecue sauce and then and they'd be like huh um no i'm good thanks and then he'd be like you know it's a it's really good barbecue
sauce you know the last customer i had really loved the barbecue sauce and then they sort of
crack up they're like okay fine yeah give me the barbecue why not it's like it breaks the pattern
people are not used to being asked being upsold on barbecue sauce when they're in a dollar drive-thru
it made it fun for the customer that made it fun for him. And he said that it just transformed the energy
that he got from his days purely because he now gave himself
a little bit of a challenge to make something
that was boring become more fun.
Yeah, whether you call it a challenge or some type of game.
Every day, how can you make what you're doing a game?
I remember, man, I've had some boring, I guess,
jobs before I got into this.
I was a truck driver for six hours a day.
Oh, no way.
Driving from Columbus, Ohio toati and back every day driving car parts
in the back of a truck every day unloading it putting in new car parts from cincinnati
driving it back in rush hour and i remember this was a time when there was no bluetooth like
bluetooth was still like i didn't have a bluetooth capability it was like a cd player or something
was in there and it's like 2007 maybe 2006 2007 and this truck was like a massive u-haul
so it was like the biggest u-haul truck you could get before needing a truck license right so it
wasn't a semi but it was a big truck you have up, you know, multiple feet to get up in there.
It's like a bucket seat.
It just kind of bounces.
And it only went 55 miles an hour, the truck.
Like the pedal, when you put it all the way to the end,
that's as fast as it would go.
So I was in the right lane the entire time.
I guess that would be the left lane in the UK.
But I was in the slow lane the entire time for six hours a day.
Watching people go by me.
on the slow lane the entire time for six hours a day.
Wow.
Watching people go by me.
And in Ohio at this location, it's like cornfields.
It's all flat cornfields. So you're not looking at anything really like mountains
and big cities.
You're just driving through corn.
And I remember after a week of this, I go,
I'm going to drive myself crazy if I don't find a way
to have some type of game or challenge from this.
And at the time, I was really trying to learn salsa dancing. So I asked a friend to burn me a CD of the greatest hits of the best salsa songs. And I started listening to the CD on repeat
and imagining myself, as I was learning salsa dancing, I would imagine myself dancing to the
songs in my mind while I was driving. And that got me through these long days.
And it made it more interesting and fun to the point where I started to get excited about going to work.
Because I was like, OK, even though I'm going to drive six hours a day, I'm going to listen to this music.
I'm going to practice salsa dancing in my mind.
And it was just a game.
It was a game.
I also did it for three months.
My aunt was uh
oh what's it called when you work when you're like a pharmacist right she was like a pharmacist specialist and she had me essentially like filling what is this filling medicine and filling like
you know pills i guess right or different things but it was more like generic stuff so it's like
okay i need you to put like 20 in these,
like 100 bottles of whatever.
You know, maybe it was Tylenol or something.
Filling it.
And this was like very boring.
It was like, you're sitting in a small room,
probably like a doctor's office,
small room, bad lighting.
And I was just like, okay.
But I remember thinking like,
I'm going to create a game.
I'm going to see how fast I can do this
and all these different things
and celebrate after I do 20 bottles.
So it was like creating some type of game and scenario around that.
And that made it more enjoyable.
So interesting.
I love this.
Play, power, and people.
I really like this concept of how can I make someone else's day with this activity that I'm doing.
So that's a really cool one right there.
How can I find a way to help someone else doing this thing?
I love that.
We've all had that feeling of, you know, there are some people that you hang out with who you know you
leave feeling really energized i think you're one of those people i always leave our conversations
pretty energized i'm like yeah um but we also probably know people that you leave conversations
with them feeling a bit drained they're like and there's this concept that psychologists call
relational energy which is exactly this this the sort of energy you get from relationships and they've done studies in organizations where they'll do a relational energy, which is exactly this, this, the sort of energy you get from relationships. And they've done studies in organizations where they'll do a relational energy
map where they'll like ask everyone, who are the people that energize you and who are the people
that drain you? And they'll do this for the whole organization. And they will find that they're,
they're usually a handful of people that are super energizers, that everyone loves them. People like
meet with them and they get energized as a result. And they also find that these people have higher ratings. They perform better. They're more productive, the more creative,
the less stressed, they're happier. They're getting more promotions, getting more money.
All of the good things happen to the people who are energizers. Whereas the people who are drainers
in an organization, no one really wants to talk to them. It's like, no one really wants to promote
them. They're a bit of a drain in energy. And so what we can take away from this is a, we should
strive to become energizers ourself.
If someone is sharing good news with us,
we respond in an active and a constructive way,
like, oh my goodness, that's so good.
Tell me more about that.
Rather than, oh, cool.
You know, there's stuff that we can do
to make ourselves a little bit more energizing for others.
But the other thing that it does
is that it tells us that, you know,
the profound power of being able to try and find people who energize us,
who lift up our energy.
Yeah.
Surrounding yourself with those individuals.
Yeah.
And then some people are like, oh, but like every single person in my team is a total,
is totally miserable.
It's like, okay, find a way to get outside of that group.
Find a way to bring the energy yourself.
Generally, if you're the one bringing energy and helping other people, they will respond
in kind.
Most people are, most people have good intentions most of
the time. And often what it takes is one person to be the person to be like, hey guys, instead of
going to the local cafeteria for lunch, should we just go to this other coffee shop and we can
have a bit more of a lively conversation? Or should we go for a walk in the park? And there
are things that you can do to add more energy to your interactions. And it's kind of weird. It's
like one of the nice things about energy, I think this is a misconception people have, people feel that
the more energy you give, the more drained you become. But it's actually not true. Similarly
with work, it's like the more effort and engagement you give to your work, that doesn't deplete your
energy. That actually renews your energy. The most draining thing in the world is coasting,
looking at your clock, being like, oh God, when is this going to end?
No one is energized by that.
That sucks the life out of you.
Sucks the life out of you.
But if you're fully engaged, if you're giving it your all, if you're showing up sincerely
rather than seriously, if you're doing all the things, treating it like play, lightness
at ease, having fun along the way, trying to help people out, you get home from the
end of the day of work feeling more energized than when you started.
Yes.
Even though, counterintuitively, you've been putting a lot of energy into it.
That was a challenge for me in school growing up. Every day I was looking at the clock, being like six hours until the end of the day, just struggling. It was hard for me to
find play in just reading a book that I struggled with, or reading a book, or memorizing, or things
like that. And so I procrastinated a lot. Oh, yeah. I procrastinated to the very last minute
to get something done. I bet you were the very last minute to get something done.
I bet you were the person
that just got everything done early.
Oh no, I wish.
I would also leave everything at the last minute.
I didn't know these strategies back in the day.
Right, right.
But procrastination is a massive struggle
for so many people.
Why do you think people procrastinate so much
and what are three key things people can do
to overcome procrastination?
Okay, so procrastination if we
really boil it down is usually a problem with getting started i think people think of procrastination
as like i'm leaving things the last minute or like whatever usually people find that once you
get started with something generally you can keep it going this is the law of inertia it takes a bit
of a push to get started once you're there you know know, for me, once I'm at the gym and I've lifted the first weight, it's like, I'll complete most of the workout.
I might skip the final set just because I'm a bit soft.
But it's getting to the gym that's the hardest part.
So if we recognize that procrastination is a problem with getting started, then all we need to do is optimize for how do I start, not how do I finish.
Because the finish will take care of itself, as it were. So how do we optimize for getting started? There are basically three things.
See how it's top three. So usually the first blocker that causes us to procrastinate
is uncertainty. If you don't know what you actually need to do. So in students, for example,
to do. So in students, for example, I'll hear people be like, oh, today I'm going to study chemistry. It's like, okay, but what does that mean? What does study chemistry mean? And they
don't know. They're like, oh, I'm just going to study chemistry. It's never going to happen.
If your plan is to study chemistry, it's never going to happen because you don't know what it
actually means. Does it mean I'm going to read the textbook? Does it mean I'm going to do a
practice test? Does it mean I'm going to do questions eight to 15 of the work that the
teacher gave me? Does it mean I'm working to do a practice test? Does it mean I'm going to do questions eight to 15 of the work that the teacher gave me? Does it mean I'm working on
this assignment or that or reading about this? Unless you know specifically what you're going
to do, it's very hard to actually do the thing. There's like, when I try and go to the gym without
a plan, now I have to spend half my brain power figuring out what am I going to do? And then I'm
like, oh, this is just too much friction. I'm just not going to bother. Like there is always an
activation energy to doing anything and having clarity clarity on what the thing actually is,
and crucially when you're actually going to do it,
makes an enormous difference.
Yes.
So getting clarity first.
Yeah, clarity is like one of the big solutions to procrastination.
What are you doing?
And when are you going to do it?
I have a little journaling reminder every morning.
I fill out this thing.
I call it the AM5 because it's sort of like 5am, but like AM5 means the first five minutes of the
morning when I sit down to work. It asks me three questions. It asks me, what is the diet plan for
today? This is a new thing I've started doing because I realized it's super helpful. What's
the diet plan for today? Because I realized if I think about it in the morning for 30 seconds,
I'll get my protein and I'll get the calories and I'll eat healthily. But if I don't think about it in the morning for 30 seconds, I'll get my protein and I'll get the calories and I'll eat healthily.
But if I don't think about it,
now the first meal I have is lunch
and now I have to decide in the morning.
Protein shake for lunch,
mid-morning snack, protein shake again,
and then chicken breast and veg for dinner,
whatever the thing.
Just spending 20 seconds making a plan.
The next question is,
what's the exercise plan for today?
Where I'm like, oh, that's a good question.
Okay, cool.
So I think, yeah, so today's workout day. So'm going to do a workout um straight after my next zoom call
and the final question is is it in the calendar then i'm like good point let me just put it in
the calendar because often all it takes is for us to know what we're doing and when we're doing it
for us to just not procrastinate a lot of people are like oh i don't have time to go to the gym
it's like it's not in the calendar you didn't schedule it if it, for us to just not procrastinate. A lot of people are like, oh, I don't have time to go to the gym. It's like, it's not in the calendar.
You didn't schedule it.
If it's not scheduled, it's not going to happen.
Schedule the bloody thing.
Treat it like you were at a work appointment.
And automatically, you solve about 50% of people's procrastination problems by just
putting it in the calendar.
Right.
So that's clarity.
That's the way you get clarity.
There you go.
OK, cool.
So once you get clarity and you answer those three questions, is there anything else that
holds us back from procrastinating?
Yeah.
The other big thing is fear. Fear is a massive one. The fear of starting,
the fear of continuing, the fear of failure, the fear of rejection.
This is what I hear from a lot of people. There's a lot of smart people in my community.
And I used to do a lot of webinars and coaching and do Q&A sessions. And I would hear this all
the time. I mean, these are individuals that are extremely intelligent, super smart, got, you know, master's degrees, PhDs, whatever it might be. They've been
working 10, 15, 20 years, and they've got a lot of skills, a lot of talent. And they're like,
I've got these, these three or four different big ideas, these dreams I've had that I really want to
get started on, or I really want to launch this book. And I'll say, how long have you been thinking about this? And let's say like seven years. Like I've just
been thinking about this book for seven years. I'm like, seven years? I'm like, how much time
and energy is that taking you from actually just getting started on it or creating a game plan,
finding out when you're going to do it, how you're going to do it, and when you want to
complete a buy? It doesn't have to be perfect. But one of the biggest things that people have is this fear,
like you talked about. Why is fear such a huge procrastination thing that holds people back?
Oh, man. I spent seven years thinking about starting a YouTube channel before I started the YouTube channel, 2010, 2017. Our brain is a survival machine.
We're so attuned to see any kind of threat as being like a terrible thing that could impact
our survival. This is part of the brain called the amygdala, which is sort of the fear center
of the brain. And a lot of the time, back in the day, we were afraid of the lion. Obviously,
the lion's going to kill us. But back in the day, we were also afraid of social disapproval,
because if you lose the respect of the alpha male in the tribe, you're going to get kicked
out of the tribe, and then that's going to be terrible for your survival, because the lion's
going to kill you. So you have to kind of go around with these tribes and stuff. And so the
brain, the mind became very attuned to viewing any decrease in our social status as being a
profound threat to our survival and usually when people are scared of doing something it's not
because the thing is going to kill them people are usually not oh man i've been thinking of skydiving
for seven years and i've not done it because i'm scared of dying it's usually not that it's usually
man i've been thinking of writing a book for seven years, but I've been a bit afraid to start because what will people think of me?
What if I fail? What if I fail? What if it doesn't work? What if I never get a deal? What if I don't
manage to do it? What if I judge myself? There's a lot of this, this sort of stuff. It's usually
not survival. It's usually threats to our social status or our standing with people, with other
people and stuff. And so because the brain is designed to do this, it's designed to protect
us from these threats,
that's why it's so easy to let fear get in the way
of us living our best life.
You know, I wanted to start a blog for like six years,
2010 to 2016.
I was like, you know what?
I want to start a personal blog.
I was reading people's personal blogs.
This was in the era of blogging
for Mark Manson stuff in 2010, back in the day,
before I went back when it was postmasculine.net.
It was about how to be a man
and how to get girls and stuff. I was like, damn, personal blogs are really, I want to start a
personal blog. And I was like, no, I can't do that. Who am I to start a personal blog? Who am
I to have my domain aliyamthal.com? I bought the domain. I just kept it inactive for six years
because I was afraid. I was afraid, will people think less of me if I have the arrogance to think
that me, a 15-year-old kid,
has the right to start a personal blog.
And then I read Austin Kleon's amazing book, Show Your Work.
That book, that one book, 20 minutes long.
It's so easy to read.
Helped me realize, I don't need to be so scared of this.
I'm not like, you know, showing myself.
I'm just showing my work.
What I'm learning in the process.
Yeah, that's cool.
I'm not the expert.
I'm learning how to become better. Yeah, exactly. I'm the guide, not the guru. I'm like, hey, I've just tried my work. What I'm learning in the process. Yeah, that's cool. I'm not the expert. I'm learning how to become better.
Yeah, exactly.
I'm the guide, not the guru.
I'm like, hey, I've just tried this thing out
and here's what I learned along the way.
So my first blog post was
how I overcame the fear of starting a blog,
where I talked about exactly this in 2016.
Wow, really?
And it took me six years to overcome that fear.
And it was just the right book at the right time
that helped me realize no one gives a...
Like I was like, oh my God,
all my friends and family are going to think,
none of my friends and family even know that i have a personal blog they just like why
why would they know why would they care like the only people that see it are like now people who
know my stuff and because i got over that fear of starting a website and a personal blog in 2016
that's what allowed me to start a youtube channel in 2017 because i was like man if you didn't start
that blog yeah where would you be today if i didn't start that blog, where would you be today?
If I didn't start that blog, I would never have started the YouTube channel. I would have had a
failing business trying to still running at the age of nearly 30, helping people get into med
school. I'd have been trying to grind to get more leads for that because it's becoming more
competitive. I'd be working as a doctor right now, freezing my bum off in a random doctor's
office in the middle of nowhere in England because I would have been shipped off to some
random location to do my specialty training. What it took was getting over the fear
and starting that blog, which led to the YouTube channel, which led to all of the good things in
my life. What was the secret of you overcoming that fear of getting started? Oh, great question.
It was two things. It was firstly realizing that no one actually cares. Realizing that,
I think at the time I hadn't heard of this, the thing of the spotlight effect. We all walk around
thinking that we have the spotlight trained on us and that anything
that we do, people are scrutinizing and judging and shit.
No one's thinking about you.
No one's thinking about me.
You know, people are busy with their own lives.
So recognizing that was a big step.
And the other thing was getting out of myself and recognizing that the point of my blog
is to help someone else.
When we move from the self to service, you know,
a lot of, I speak to somebody, but the average age of people in my YouTube, of course, is 36.
We have a lot of people who are parents. They struggle so much to start to make their first
YouTube video. They're making it about them. They're making it about them. But if you ask them,
would you do anything for your kids? Of course I'd do anything. We're so much more likely
to do things for other people than we are for ourselves. And so finding a way to shift the
reason you're doing something, it's not about me, it's about helping someone else. So the thing I
would tell myself and what Austin Kleon says in his book, Show Your Work, is does this thing that
you're thinking of sharing have the potential to help at least one person in any small way?
If it's a photo of your coffee, probably not.
Therefore, don't post it.
But if it's a little small little write-up of like,
hey, I read Lewis Howes' book, The Greatness of Mindset.
Here are three things I've learned from it.
That has the potential to help someone.
Great.
Make it about them.
Don't make it about you.
That's cool.
And so every blog post that I wrote, I was like,
it's not about me.
I'm writing for someone else.
And I'm just trying to help them with something that I've learned recently.
There's no ego involved
purely in the spirit of service
yes
and that attitude has served me so much
in the last 10 years of YouTube as well
I think that's one of the reasons
why I've been able to
make it sustainable for me
with the School of Greatness
is because when I started it
I remember a lot of people telling me
oh you should make
because I kind of had like a little
you know personal brand
and like online marketing
and LinkedIn and webinars
and I was like the online marketing guy or whatever, one in a sea of many people.
But I had my own lane.
And when I was thinking about doing the podcast and I was calling a few different friends,
they're like, why don't you just make it like your name?
You know?
And I go, I could, but I don't want to make it about me.
I want to make it about others.
And so that's what I made.
It was like the School of Greatness with Lewis Howes.
Because I want to be on the journey of learning from other smart people like yourself and
like learning these lessons.
And that has allowed me to take a lot of pressure off me.
I don't have to be as serious of like everything needs to be perfect.
Although I want things to be perfect and great.
It's allowed me to kind of let go of that pressure.
And it's made me to think about like, if I can help one
person from this conversation, then it's worth it. And I think about those things. It's not about me.
It's about serving, learning from others and serving others who are listening. And that has
allowed me to be consistent. I think one of the things that has allowed me, but I think going from
self to services is a key message. A lot of people need to step into because fear holds so
many people back on taking action mark manson actually created a video recently called the
spotlight effect it's of him walking in a chicken suit like he has a full chicken suit on and he's
walking down in santa monica uh where you're staying he's walking down the boardwalk where
everyone's kind of going by on bikes and rollerblades
or whatever, walking around.
And he's walking by them, shooting the video, saying there's this concept called the spotlight
effect.
And he's put himself in this chicken suit.
He's wearing a chicken hat.
He's got a whole chicken thing on.
And he's talking about it.
And he goes, to be honest, most people don't care.
Like, I'm walking down the street right now in a chicken suit, and most people aren't
watching me. And they had another camera showing the reactions of people walking by or riding by. care. Like I'm walking down the street right now in a chicken suit and most people aren't watching
me. And they had another camera showing the reactions of people walking by or riding by.
And maybe he can get like a glance of someone and be like, huh, what is this guy doing with
a camera and a chicken suit? And then he would make a point of like, okay, even if they are
looking for a second, they're turning around and they're going towards their destination.
And they're probably not going to remember this. they're not going to sit there and like point a finger and laugh at you all day and
all year long even if it's for a moment of like humiliation they're on thinking about their own
lives so let it go keep focusing on your own thing was kind of the premise of it which i thought was
interesting um okay so you're talking about getting clarity would be the first one learning
to overcome fear would be one other way to overcome procrastination in your mind?
One other way is just getting over that hurdle of inertia.
And my favorite thing for this is the five-minute rule.
Just convince yourself you're only going to do the thing for five minutes.
So back when I had an actual desk, I would have a five-minute hourglass
on my desk at all times. And when I found myself procrastinating from something, I'd think, you
know what? I'll just turn the hourglass over and just do it for five minutes. And usually, I forgot
that I even had an hourglass because the time would just go and I'd be doing the thing. Sometimes,
I'd be like, okay, I'm really not feeling it. And then I would give myself permission to just not
do it. Yeah. I don't want to do it. Yeah. I did five minutes, I'm done. Yeah, five minutes is a win.
That's good.
It's like finding the win in as easy a way as possible.
But like 85% of the time,
probably I would just continue doing the thing.
And I found the five minute rule
to be really good in beating procrastination.
This is also why I, this is kind of random,
but I like finding songs that are exactly five minutes.
Bohemian Rhapsody is a song
that is basically exactly five minutes. So you can even minutes. Bohemian Rhapsody is a song that is basically exactly five minutes.
So you can even put on Bohemian Rhapsody and you can be like,
for the duration of this song, I'm going to do this thing.
I often think in terms of like song length, like I, you know,
most songs like three, three minutes, three and a half minutes.
Sometimes I'll tell themselves, I'll tell myself, you know what?
My room's a bit of a mess right now. My desk is a bit right now.
I'm just going to give myself a song.
And in that song,
I'm going to clean up as much as I can.
And I would put on like my favorite,
like rule the world by take that,
or like the greatest day
or like something by one Republic.
It's like upbeat and uplifting.
As soon as the song's over, I'm done.
But you can make so much progress
with tidying your desk in three minutes.
So much.
And it becomes a game.
It becomes fun.
It becomes less of a chore.
And you might also feel like,
okay, I'm halfway done.
Let me finish this.
Yeah, exactly.
Yeah, sometimes I'd be like, I would go into the next song, Spotify autoplay might also feel like, okay, I'm halfway done. Let me finish this. Yeah, exactly. Sometimes I'd be like,
I would go on to the next song,
Spotify autoplay.
It's like it knows the vibe
that you're going for with one song
and then we go to the next one.
Yeah.
One of the things I really respect about you
is that you've read a ton of books
in the last 15, 20 years.
And I think you have like a photographic memory.
You've memorized like almost all the key insights
from every book you've ever read,
I think is what I, is that something like that? No, I wish I had a photographic memory. But like almost all the key insights from every book you've ever read i think is what i uh that's something like that i wish i had a photographic memory but but you
remember you have a great memory yeah you remember a lot of things like you could you could recall
like three things from probably most books you've read yeah it's also because i make videos about
them right i think this is the thing it's like when like in 2016 when i started my blog i was
like huh i read a lot of these books and I remember
from what I've read.
So why don't I just make
these little articles
where I write some lessons
that I've learned from the things.
That helps you remember them.
Helps me remember,
yeah,
it means that,
I'm thinking,
greatness mindset,
what was the lesson?
It's GPA,
meaningful mission,
the three Ps.
That was the thing that you said,
what was it?
It was,
that was a really good
Seth Godin quote.
I'm like,
oh,
I need to go back
and find the Seth Godin quote. I think it was about the process and doing things for 7,500 times or something like that's there was a really good seth godin quote i'm like oh i need to go back and find this stuff godin quote i think it was about like the process and like doing the thing
for 7 500 times or something like that i was like that was some good and then there were the five
p's priority but i can't remember the five p okay i need to go back and look at that it's like as
i'm reminding myself of these things because i'm making a video about the book or writing a
newsletter about the book or whatever like sharing something makes you way more likely to learn it
yourself and so even if it's just sharing it on facebook or sharing it on instagram like one of or writing a newsletter about the book or whatever, sharing something makes you way more likely to learn it yourself.
And so even if it's just sharing it on Facebook or sharing it on Instagram,
one of the things I'm very bullish on
is just people sharing the things they've learned
purely selfishly
because it helps you remember it yourself.
Right, yeah, of course.
That's cool.
So sharing these things.
You have a video that a lot of people loved,
which is about what really makes people successful.
I'm curious from all the studies, all the research interviews you've done the videos you've made the books
you've read your own personal experience what do you think really makes people successful
my answer to this has actually changed over time my answer to this now like
when i started when i started this process of, like, doing these videos and stuff, I wouldn't have had a good answer for this.
I would have said, like, oh, success is all, like, very personal.
And, like, who's to say that money success is actual success and things like that.
And I don't know.
Someone just doing what they want maybe is what makes them successful.
And my answer is still that, but it's a bit more refined.
It's the thing that makes people successful
is knowing what they want
and actually just working towards it.
Knowing what they want and working towards it
and adjusting course along the way.
And it's just that thing of like GPS and goal plan system.
If you have a goal, you have a plan,
you have a system to follow the plan
and you just change the plan if it's not working,
you're going to be successful.
And this is not successful in terms of like,
you have to make all this money
or you have to whatever, get a six pack abs.
It's success in terms of whatever you want it to be.
That's why the subtitle of the book is
how to do more of what matters to you.
To me, success is knowing what matters to you
and then just doing the thing.
Doing more of it.
Doing more of it or like working towards it.
And there's this thing,
I think Hubert has been talking about this recently.
It's not the pursuit of happiness. It's the happiness happiness of pursuit when you're pursuing something that you actually enjoy
and that's meaningful to you that is that's that's literally the pinnacle of life yeah i know people
you i'm sure you know people who've sold companies for hundreds of millions of dollars they're
miserable once they sell the company they were happier working towards the goal and they all
start new companies because they're like either they start companies or they start podcasts that's their thing or they write self-help books yeah yeah
because it's like they need some new pursuit you need some new pursuit the pursuit is what creates
happiness the pursuit is what creates that feeling of i'm i'm a feeling of success yeah it's
interesting because you know before i used to be a type of guy that always wanted to achieve my
goals and i achieved a lot of them you know from sports to business to whatever it might be, different
milestones that I had from my teens and 20s and 30s.
And I would accomplish a lot of them.
And I realized that wasn't the thing that made me feel peaceful and fulfilled, accomplishing
it.
It was fun.
It was cool.
But it wasn't like, now I feel better about myself.
It increased some confidence, but it also made me realize, oh, I still have sadness
and pain and suffering inside.
So this isn't the answer to being peaceful and joyful and fulfilled and happy.
And I started to go on my healing journey and really kind of like dissecting the past
and creating different stories about my past and finding meaning from the past and having harmony
around it. I started to set different goals and actually realize it doesn't matter if I accomplish
this goal. What matters is what I do every day on the pursuit and the path. Like did I show up
doing what I said I was going to do for myself and for others was i consistent in my ways of being did i respond well you know my majority of the times
i'm not a perfect human being but did i respond well in situations that were frustrating or
triggering did i care about other peoples did i that i want other people to succeed and did i
do my best to empower them and give them tools and trainings to succeed? Did I show up with good attitude, good energy, you know, majority of the time?
Did I make it about others and not about me?
All these different things.
And if I accomplish the goal, cool.
But if I don't accomplish the goal, can I still be proud of who I was and how I showed
up every single day?
And that makes me feel good.
Now, part of my ego wants to say, ah, but if you don't
accomplish the goal, you're a loser, right? Part of me wants to think that. And that's part of the
reason why I've created such big goals. Cause I'm like, it might take me 10 years. I don't know.
But what I can create in the path and who I become in that path is going to be so much greater than the actual
accomplishment. And I think if we start thinking that way about who we're becoming and how we're
showing up and how we're being on a day-to-day basis, we'll be a lot happier with who we are.
So that's what I think about. Like I want to accomplish all my goals. I want to hit my
financial numbers. I want our team to grow. I want, you know, all these things. I want to have
be healthy, but it's also like, if it doesn't happen, you know,
what can I control and how can I just be consistent with that every day?
Yeah. I think people think that success makes you feel good, but it's actually that feeling
good makes you successful. Absolutely. You can feel good every day of the thing. And like,
crucially, like, I think,
and this is... Because there's no point in being super successful,
rich and famous if you don't feel good.
Yeah.
Like, what's the point?
What is the point of working that hard
to get those things
if you still don't feel good about you?
Yeah.
But feeling good will just make you successful
in terms of, it doesn't matter
if you have those things or not
because you feel good about you.
Yeah, 100%. And people, you usually will attract good people around you yeah and you're
also more likely to then be productive and creative and less stressed let's feel feel
productive and more financially successful whatever it is like all the good things happen
when you can just focus on the process and focus on enjoying it yes and you know it's it's useful
to have an idea of what you want like you know as you said you have these goals but the way i think
of goals is it's not about the goal.
The point of the goal is to set your direction.
It's like, I'm not fixated on the destination,
but at least I know what direction I'm heading in.
Because otherwise, you know, we all have so many options.
Anyone listening to this has a ton of options in their life.
Even if you feel like you don't have any options right now,
compared to someone who's not able to listen to this podcast,
you have a ton of options, objectively.
But a lot of uncertainty and anxiety comes from this thing of like,
I could go in this direction or that direction or this direction or that direction.
But one of the best pieces of advice I got in medical school was from one of my,
one of the senior colleagues who I really looked up to. And he said, this was around the time,
I think it was four years in out of the six year course. And around that time,
people start asking you, what do you want to specialize in? What specialty you want to go for and you don't need to decide until like
six years later but people people kept asking and this guy asked me dr adcock um chris so chris so
chris asked me what specialty do you want to go into and i was like oh i'm not sure like uh you
know i've got some time to decide it was like okay but one piece of advice is that it's much easier
to steer a moving ship than a stationary ship.
So what he said was, I'd recommend you just pick a specialty and start working towards it.
And you can always change your mind.
If you don't like it, then you can steer it in a different direction.
And I was like, huh, okay, Chris, sure, I'll do that.
So I picked plastic surgery and I just started working towards it.
And tons of good started happening in my life when I started working towards that.
Now I got connected with these cool plastic surgeons.
I became the web designer for this really cool like charity that does like reconstructive surgery in developing
countries i joined these hackathons where my skills with computer programming combined with
this plastic surgery stuff i made friends along the way and ultimately realized actually now i've
met a lot of plastic surgeons don't think it's a life for me but what i really like is i i love the
i love the emergency side of things so i mean maybe i want to go into anesthesiology anest, as we call it. And it's like moving in that direction allowed me to steer the ship.
And I think that's the point of goals. The point of goals is that it just gives you a direction
to head in and it gives you a path. And you can ask yourself, is this the right path? Am I on the
path towards the goal? And do I want to be on the path towards the goal? And either which way,
it's okay. If you're not on the path to the goal and you want to be, it's like, cool, you change something. If you are on the path and you realize the goal is
not what you want, you change the goal. But either way, you're making progress, you're moving.
And it's kind of weird. It's like, I have all the freedom in the world now. I can literally
do whatever I want. I could not work a day in my life if I didn't want to and just live on a beach
in Bali. But when I've taken an extended break from not making YouTube videos, there's part of
me that feels unfulfilled. Why? Because right now my meaningful
mission is to be able to learn, synthesize, share, and teach. I love that. And to me, right now,
that's in the format of YouTube videos, in the format of the book, in the format of the podcast.
But the main thing is YouTube videos. That's the practice. That's the thing that I show up and I
do every week, where if I read something, I'll figure out a way to share it. If I blend something,
I'll figure out a way to share it. If someone's asked a question, I'm like, I actually have a
take on goal setting. I'd find a way to share it in video. And I don't have to make a video every
week. But there's something like when I'm doing, it's like working out. When you're showing up to
the gym regularly, you just feel better about yourself. There's something about it of like,
you're acting in a way that's consistent with your meaningful mission, with your identity,
with who you want to be. Freedom ain't all that it's cracked up to be right the point
of freedom is to be able to do do things that matter to you and so you realize i should just
do the things and i just feel way better as opposed to just having endless options yeah
yeah options are not that fun yeah they're fun for a bit yeah that meaningful after a while yeah
and feel good productivity.
How to do more of what matters to you.
Make sure you guys get a copy of this book.
When you dropped the video of announcing it, I pre-ordered it right away.
And there's so much wisdom in here, so much great information that people can use on how to be more productive, feel more productive, and have more fun doing it. And that's really the key.
I don't think it's about grinding and working so hard and hustling to where you feel exhausted,
drained, and burnt out. That's not what people want. They want to feel productive. They want
to feel like they're maximizing time and that they're enjoying their time while doing it.
So that's what Feel Good Productivity teaches you and shows you how
to do by Ali Abdaal, the world's most followed productivity expert. So make sure you guys check
out a copy of this book. I would say get a couple copies for your friends, family members, people
that maybe feel stressed out and overwhelmed right now. Give them this so they have some tools and
frameworks on how to apply their time differently to their life and their work and feel good about it.
What else do we need to know about burnout, productivity, hustle culture, making money
online?
What else is on your heart and mind right now that you feel like if people knew this
one thing, if they truly knew this one thing, their life would be better, more meaningful,
and they would feel abundant versus overwhelmed and stressed.
I would say when it comes to making money, if you can get to a point, and this is accessible
to literally anyone, if you can get to a point where the money you're making on the side
covers your expenses,
that unlocks a ridiculous amount of freedom for you.
It gives you the freedom to quit your job if you want.
It gives you the freedom to cut down your hours on your job if you want.
A lot of people enjoy their jobs,
but maybe you don't enjoy it for 60 hours a week.
Maybe you'd enjoy it for 20 hours a week.
Gives you the option to go part-time,
gives you the option to go freelance,
gives you many, many, many options.
Getting to the point where the money you make on the side
covers your expenses,
I think that should be a goal for everyone in life because it just changes your life.
It gives you so much freedom. It means you're more anti-fragile. It means that
if a pandemic strikes and people are losing their jobs, you're not that concerned because
you're making the money on the side. It teaches you so many skills because to become the sort
of person who makes two or 3K on the side requires you to develop so many skills that are going to change
your life and they're going to make you more valuable to employers in the future if that's
what you care about. They'll give you more self-esteem because now you've learned all
these new skills and literally anyone can do it with the power of the internet and the power of
reading a couple of books. That is incredible. Beyond that point, beyond the point where you're
making enough money to buy your freedom, I would say don't fixate so much
on the money. You know, you and I are rich, objectively. We also know people who are way
richer than us. It doesn't really buy more happiness beyond the freedom that it buys
initially. Maybe you get a slightly nicer house and a slightly nicer area of LA for an extra
5 million or whatever the thing might be. But I think beyond the point, if I had my time again,
I'd be doing whatever I could to get to, you know, Noah Kagan calls it the freedom number. Oh, you're about to interview him. He calls it the freedom number. Get to the point if if i had my time again i'd be doing whatever i could to get to you know noah kagan
calls it the freedom oh you're about to interview him because of the freedom number get to the point
where you're making enough money to feel free at that point stop worrying so much about the money
and focus on doing a process consistently that provides value to others that you enjoy
and you can find a way to enjoy because then the money will take care of itself yes
that first hurdle that freedom number that no talks about, that's so important.
We'll change your life to have enough money coming in on the side to pay your expenses.
I love this.
And it seems out of touch with some people. People can be like, oh, you don't know my circumstances.
Okay, fine.
I don't know your circumstances.
I know plenty of people who have been from terrible circumstances who have managed to
find that and make it happen.
There's no shortage of stories on the internet and podcasts and books of people who have
done it.
If someone else can do it, you can as well.
There's always a way if you decide it's a priority for you right
if you don't that's okay but personally you and i can attest to it it's so nice having enough money
to not worry about paying bills it's really nice it's so nice to be able to do what you love rather
than drive trucks for six hours or right right for six years or kind of be a doctor in the way
sure yeah not that being you know being doctor, if that's meaningful for you,
then that's a great life.
Exactly.
Driving a truck is meaningful for you,
that's a great life.
It wasn't the path that I felt called to do at that time.
Same with you.
It was originally,
but then the path shifted.
Yeah, and that's okay.
And that's okay too.
And also, again,
we both know a lot of people
who have way more money than us,
who are way more stressed out,
overwhelmed,
exhausted, unhealthy, have horrible relationships. And so it is nice to have more money than I did before. It's nice to have money where I can pay for my own things as opposed to
my sister, sleeping on my sister's couch for a year and a half for free and living at my brother's
place for $250 a month for six months and feeling like I couldn't take care of myself. So it is nice to
be able to provide for yourself and others in different ways. But it doesn't mean there aren't
other challenges and complications that you have to learn how to overcome with money. So we've both
seen that as well. This is powerful, man. I want people to get the book, feel good productivity,
make sure you guys get a couple of copies. I asked you this question before two and a half years ago, but I'm going to ask you again,
your three truths. So hypothetical question, imagine you get to live as long as you want to
live, but it's your last day. You've extended your life as long as you could go physically,
but you got to turn the lights off and you're out of this physical world and you get to create
everything you want for your life.
All your dreams come true, you feel good every day,
you do meaningful work, you have a beautiful life,
relationships, everything you want happens.
But for whatever reason,
you have to take all of your work with you.
All your content, book, video,
everything you make from here on out
has to go with you to another place.
No one has access to it anymore. But you get to leave behind three lessons. Everything you've learned from your existence,
what I call three truths. What would be those three truths that you would want people to have
access to? Okay. The first one would be success comes to those who figure out where they want to go and keep moving in that direction.
Number two would be, on the route to success, remember to take care of your health and
relationships because they matter far more than your work. And number three would be,
and whatever you do, remember to enjoy the journey along the way.
I love those.
I feel like there's been a big shift in you
over the last few years, you know,
and I think a lot of people might look at you
and see this analytical, really intelligent,
productive master.
But I've noticed getting to know you,
you know, you tap into emotions and feelings and reflecting on these things and i think it's really beautiful to see that
transition of kind of blending both like the analytical mind and like the the genius in you
that's like creative and productive and launching and building with someone who's also reflecting and taking time to go to a
retreat or journal or therapy or coaching or whatever it might be and start reflecting
inward as well, as opposed to just thinking of like, how can I be as hyperproductive as
possible?
So I want to acknowledge you, Ali, for the journey you've been on since I've gotten to
know you in the last couple of years, tapping into your, your heart, your emotions, not letting them consume or control you, but allowing you to
feel and experience the beauty and the wonder and the all of life as well. Uh, as well as being,
you know, productive and creative and, and building what you're building. So I really
acknowledge you for the journey, man. It's fun to watch you evolve. And I acknowledge you for everything that's
happening in your life and all the beautiful things behind the scenes that I'll keep private
between us that I know are happening as well, man. So I want to acknowledge you for that.
And again, I want people to get the book, feel good productivity. Final question for you,
what is your definition of greatness? I think for me, the definition of
greatness is working towards what truly matters to you and having fun along the way.
I hope today's episode inspired you on your journey towards greatness. Make sure to check
out the show notes in the description for a rundown of today's show with all the important
links. And if you want weekly exclusive bonus episodes with me as well as ad-free listening experience,
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And if no one has told you today,
I wanna remind you that you are loved,
you are worthy, and you matter. And now it one has told you today, I want to remind you that you are loved, you are worthy,
and you matter. And now it's time to go out there and do something great.