The 6 top minds that change the average person's life!
1. Champion Thinking
If you want to make something happen, first memorize the highest standards of the thing one by one and know them by heart. Then see which one you haven't done, compare them one by one, practice them, and improve them.
The reason why Su Bingtian is so powerful is that he trains according to the "championship model": he uses high-tech equipment to monitor all aspects of his fitness, technique and recovery, to see which part is weaker and how far away he is from the championship, and then, based on the analysis data, he develops a personalised training programme. Based on the analysis of the data, we can then formulate a personalised training programme to improve our shortcomings and strengthen our longcomings, to enhance our overall athletic ability.
We ordinary people can follow the "champion mindset" to guide our behaviour, and we cannot say that we will become champions, but we will stand out.
For example, I teach writing, and when I am revising an essay for a student, I must have a standard in mind, and only when that standard is met will the essay pass muster. I will tell the student what that standard is, and then where the gaps are, and what skills he needs to practice, so the student's progress is very big, and will also feel that I can point out his problems at once, which is particularly beneficial.
2. Process thinking
This thinking can be used in conjunction with the champion thinking above. Each complex task can be broken down into individual processes, and if each process is done well, the results will naturally be good.
The book Deep Thinking mentions that process thinking can have a compounding effect, what does that mean? It means that the effort you put into each process is presented in exponential multiples in the task results.
For example, suppose a task has 6 processes, if in each process you put in 30% more effort than others, then your result is that you achieve 4.83 times the results of the average person. Even if you are an average person, with full process optimisation, you can achieve genius-like results.
So, to be great, you don't need to do anything spectacular, you just need to be a little more attentive and conscientious than others in every little thing.
3. Leverage thinking
Leveraging thinking means finding the most important factor that drives things forward, powering up at that point, and using small forces to pry big resources. This requires us to analyze carefully before we do something, to find the most critical that point, to hit the spot.
If you know resources that others don't, you can use the information gap lever to leverage a deal. Using the small amount of resources you have to leverage big outside resources is also a kind of leverage thinking. For example, if you have a great idea but you don't have the time and energy to implement it at the moment, you can spend some money to hire someone who is action-oriented to do that practical work for you.
4. Green light thinking
To understand green light thinking, we first need to know what red light thinking is. Red light thinking is the moment you hear an opinion you don't like, information that is outside your cognitive range, you subconsciously shut down the input channel and your brain screams, "I'm not listening! " "That's not what I want to know! " Such thinking allows us to receive only the information we are familiar with, and the brain gradually solidifies, trapped in its acreage.
Green light thinking is the opposite, holding a state of acceptance of the unfamiliar and having a lifelong desire to learn. People with a green light mindset appear to be more tolerant, certain and not resistant to what they don't know, but rather find out if there is information that will help them grow.
5. Proactive thinking
Proactive thinking, as the name implies, allows us to be more proactive. The secret to having proactive thinking is to move from a "want me" to an "I want me" mindset, which means that every time I do something, I think of it as something I want to do, not something that someone else is forcing me to do. For example, going to work is painful, but when I think that it is the price I have to pay to increase my income and live a quality life, it is not so painful.
If you're exercising to get fit, for example, if you're only doing it for a certain purpose, like losing weight, if you're only doing it so that other people don't think you're fat, that kind of motivation will make it hard for you to keep going because it's all passive. If you think of it this way, I'm exercising just for the refreshing, happy feeling afterwards, then you'll be very motivated and even a bit addicted.
If you think of exercise as a way to achieve a goal, you'll be miserable and want it to end quickly and won't actively want to start; but if you think of exercise itself as a reward, you won't be able to stop and you'll feel like you're missing something even if you don't do it for a day. It's the same with everything else. The mystery of developing active thinking is to think of the thing itself as fun and a reward.
6. Golden circle thinking
It seems simple enough to change the original sequence from outside to inside (what to do - how to do it - why to do it) to inside to outside, but the two results are opposed.
When you do something and figure out why you're doing it first, it stimulates the underlying emotions and drive, making it easier to stick with it. For example, let's take our running as an example. Why is it that many people list a very detailed workout plan, what time they are going to run today, how many kilometres they are going to run and what results they can achieve, and still don't stick to it?
It is because they have not thought about why we are running. If you think clearly about why you want to run, not the reasons given to you by others, but what you want from your heart, it will be easier for you to stick to it. Like we said above, running is about the enjoyment in running, then you experience that enjoyment so often that you will be angry with anyone who doesn't let you run. You can also apply the Golden Circle method when it comes to convincing others.
That's all I have to share for today.
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