The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

471: Steve Magness - Why We Get Resilience Wrong & The Surprising Science Of Real Toughness (Do Hard Things)


Listen Later

Text Hawk to 66866 to receive a carefully curated email from me each Monday morning to help you start your week off right...

Full show notes at www.LearningLeader.com

Twitter/IG: RyanHawk12  https://twitter.com/RyanHawk12

Steve Magness is a world-renowned expert on performance, co-author of Peak Performance: Elevate Your Game, Avoid Burnout, and Thrive with the New Science of Success and The Passion Paradox: A Guide to Going All In, Finding Success, and Discovering the Benefits of an Unbalanced Life, and the author of The Science of Running: How to Find Your Limit and Train to Maximize Your Performance. His new book is called Do Hard Things.

Notes:

  • The best aren’t concerned with being the best. They’re concerned with being the best at getting better.”
  • Confidence: Confidence needs evidence. Acting with bravado we haven't earned only works on easy things. It backfires on anything truly challenging. Doing difficult things, even if you don't quite succeed at them, is how you develop real confidence.
  • How do you find a good mentor? Do interesting things. Be open to learning and guidance. Be motivated, driven, and curious about something. Put your ego aside. Do good, quality work.
  • The difference between real and fake toughness. Fake toughness is easy to identify. It’s Bobby Knight losing control and throwing tantrums in the name of “discipline.” It’s the appearance of power without substance behind it.
    • Researchers out of Eastern Washington set out to explore the relationship between leadership style and the development of toughness. After conducting research on nearly two hundred basketball players and their coaches, they concluded, “The results of this study seem to suggest that the ‘keys’ to promoting mental toughness do not lie in this autocratic, authoritarian, or oppressive style. It appears to lie, paradoxically, with the coach’s ability to produce an environment, which emphasizes trust and inclusion, humility, and service.
  • Sustained Excellence: Observation: the people who sustain success over the long haul are rarely shooting for success. They are focused on the path. Their goal is mastery, which knows no end.
  • What characteristics do the best performers have?
    • Don't get tired of the boring stuff
    • Masters of compartmentalization
    • Can flip the switch
    • Know how to lose well
    • Cultivate perspective
    • Delayed gratification
    • Drive from within
  • Creating an enemy: Whenever an organization, group, or individual works hard to create an enemy to pit their idea/group against, it's a sign you probably shouldn't listen. Us vs. Them is the easiest way to exploit human nature, to get people on your side. It often means there's no substance there.
  • The best way to get the most out of someone is to make them feel secure enough that they can take risks and fail. Most of us don't reach our potential because we default to protective mode. Threatening & demanding makes us protect further. Security and belonging frees us up.
  • “Growth comes at the point of resistance. Skills come from struggle.”
  • “The fact is that often coaches figure out what works in training and then the scientists come in later and explain why it works.”
  • What can we learn about success and performance from Eliud Kipchoge?
    • He is not fanatical about trying to be great all the time. He is consistent & patient.
    • His coach says that the secret is that he makes progress “slowly by slowly.”
    • Motivation + Discipline = Consistency
      • He told The NY Times, "He estimates that he seldom pushes himself past 80 percent — 90 percent, tops — of his maximum effort when he circles the track."
    • "I have a mindset whereby I am a human being. I am walking around as a human being. I learn to perform well at the same time being grounded. And I trust that being humble and being on the ground is the only way to concentrate"
    • "You cannot train alone and expect to run a fast time. There is a formula: 100% of me is nothing compared to 1% of the whole team. And that’s teamwork. That’s what I value."
    • “To be precise, I am just going to try to run my personal best. If it comes as a world record, I would appreciate it. But I would treat it as a personal best.”
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

The Learning Leader Show With Ryan HawkBy Ryan Hawk

  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9
  • 4.9

4.9

1,275 ratings


More shows like The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk

View all
The Look & Sound of Leadership by Essential Communications - Tom Henschel

The Look & Sound of Leadership

1,161 Listeners

Andy Stanley Leadership Podcast by Andy Stanley

Andy Stanley Leadership Podcast

2,256 Listeners

Coaching for Leaders by Dave Stachowiak

Coaching for Leaders

1,463 Listeners

Why That Worked  – Presented by StoryBrand.ai by StoryBrand.ai

Why That Worked – Presented by StoryBrand.ai

1,925 Listeners

Game Changers with Molly Fletcher by Molly Fletcher

Game Changers with Molly Fletcher

263 Listeners

The Global Leadership Podcast by Global Leadership Network

The Global Leadership Podcast

265 Listeners

The Jon Gordon Podcast by Jon Gordon

The Jon Gordon Podcast

1,213 Listeners

Speak Up: Develop Your Executive Presence & Leadership Communication Style by Laura Camacho

Speak Up: Develop Your Executive Presence & Leadership Communication Style

78 Listeners

Maxwell Leadership Executive Podcast by John Maxwell

Maxwell Leadership Executive Podcast

383 Listeners

FranklinCovey On Leadership by FranklinCovey

FranklinCovey On Leadership

219 Listeners

Maxwell Leadership Podcast by John Maxwell

Maxwell Leadership Podcast

2,449 Listeners

At The Table with Patrick Lencioni by Patrick Lencioni

At The Table with Patrick Lencioni

1,117 Listeners

A Bit of Optimism by Simon Sinek

A Bit of Optimism

2,174 Listeners

The Working Genius Podcast with Patrick Lencioni by Patrick Lencioni

The Working Genius Podcast with Patrick Lencioni

360 Listeners

HBR On Leadership by Harvard Business Review

HBR On Leadership

155 Listeners