Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 9, 2017

Waching daily Sep 19 2017

These Household creates Thyroid Problem - Tamil Health Tips

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🌍 La Sanación Espiritual · MUNDO PRÁNICO 🌍 - Duration: 14:31.

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Celowniki optyczne do karabinków - co warto wiedzieć? Część 1 - Duration: 4:14.

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SHELEST - 'Who' We - Duration: 3:40.

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✯ Влажные мечты: Керченский мост будет передан под международный протекторат - Duration: 5:25.

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Базовый осенний гардероб 2017. Осенняя мода женщин 50 + - Duration: 10:28.

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Voici Mon Canada: Le pays de tout le monde - Duration: 0:07.

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Voici Mon Canada: Canada c'est la liberté - Duration: 0:05.

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रूपनारायण 🙏 मंदिर राजसमंद, राजस्थान | मंदिर के अंदर का भव्य दृश्य | Roopnarayan Temple Saventri - Duration: 4:46.

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Underwater Photography - Lenses - Duration: 9:43.

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What Does Freedom Mean To You? - Part 12 - Duration: 0:51.

Freedom means to me that you've got the

ability to what you want when you want,

whenever you want.

Kind of like just to be out doing what

you want to do.

I think we're spoiled as people.

You know what I mean?

We go to other places and other

countries and there's- just being able to

go to the grocery store, being able to

pick and choose where we work.

We take our jobs for granted; we take our

families for granted and there's so much

in this world that people don't even have

a place to live, or even can have a choice

of a job or marriage, relationships.

I think it just gives us so much that

we're kind of spoiled and we just

take it for granted.

For more infomation >> What Does Freedom Mean To You? - Part 12 - Duration: 0:51.

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Voici Mon Canada: Canada c'est mon coeur - Duration: 0:05.

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Biometric door lock system - Ultraloq UL3 BT unboxing - Duration: 4:59.

Hey Everyone it'S Joshua from Gross Tech Bringing you another useful Review this week our friends at You tech sent me their new

ultra lock

Bluetooth Enabled fingerprint and Touch Screen Smart Lever Lock as

Always the Links in the description Will take You to their page to get the most

Up-To-date pricing and with That welcome Guys to another unboxing

Hey so we open This Up here and we are greeted with the instruction

Manual as Well as The templates for

setting Being Able to cut these Holes

Open We have the two Handles on the front now They are

Silver They come in two different colors but This One's a Silver pack and They are Actually quite heavy and Hefty?

Underneath That is the Actual lock itself

On this side We Have the side That Will be on the outside to where the door where you Put your fingerprint and

The Top will have the Keypad as Well and Then with the cable it's about

four Inches long on

The Other side We Have What Will be on the inside of your Door

It's Just Plain Simple the battery compartment is Necessarily What is there and that is it Takes three

Triple a batteries That are included They Say that it will last for

8,000 Times of Access Which They are Saying Is an entire year of

Access for Your Door Locks Holds for three triple a batteries for an entire year

That's Pretty awesome i Must Say so it's pretty Nice that you have?

Everything

Included in this Kit and That Was one Thing that blew me away was how much they Actually

Give You with This kit Now it is an Expensive lock so you would hope it would be

but It comes With Everything You Need the batteries

Even It Comes with a Screw Driver to install

This Whole entire Thing with speaking of Which iF you check out the link in

The description Below It Will have a Link to us installing It Showing you how to use it and everything like That

It will also Be at the end of this video

so it comes With Everything a Normal

Lock Will Come with your latch That Goes the inside of your door you can Make It longer or Shorter

Based off of How Deep your door is that comes with The catch as well for the

Doorframe and all The screws that is needed to do the installation and

I have to say This Was a Very?

Very simple and easy Installation

Again comes with Everything You can Possibly imagine

That You would Need even not Just the hardware but The Actual screwdriver with Both Ways

Flathead and Phillips to be Able to install This entire system so

Let me show You Real quick what It Looks like if i put in the batteries Here Just before it's actually Installed

As we Put It in you'll see the indicator for the blue Tooth up in that

Left corner Blinking Let's plug in the

Front Half it'S a single cable Just Goes into a Kind of like a Molex Connection and

All in the front now?

Everything is lit Up so It is all Touch Pad so your Keypad numbers and Everything is all Just Touch

but it's got a little display at The bottom that Will actually Read iF it's

Open Unlocked or still Locked on the bottom Here is where you've Actually insert the key

The fingerprint is Always Lit When you're trying to use it and then Goes off When it is not Now you are able to

Set this to where it Will

Be Unlocked for the entire time or be locked for the entire time so that Way

You don't have to always have the pin or your fingerprint Just to you know Say you have a

Party Going on You don't want. To have to Have People?

Entering in Their Pin in Every single time They try to get in and out but all in all this Thing Is a Solid

Dust Proof It is IPv

65 Rated so why there

Water resistance You don't really have to Worry about It once It is installed

Again Check out that Installation video coming Up soon and

Again Thank you for watching i'M Josh Growth with gross tech god bless and have a Great weekend?

For more infomation >> Biometric door lock system - Ultraloq UL3 BT unboxing - Duration: 4:59.

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Brendon Burchard: How to be Successful (Using Science) - Duration: 33:54.

Hey, it's Marie Forleo and you are watching MarieTV, the place to be to create a business

and life you love. Now, if you've ever wondered what it takes to be a high performer in your

life, today's guest is going to show you how. Brendon Burchard is a New York Times,

Wall Street Journal, Amazon, and USA Today best-selling author and the world's leading

high performance coach. Tens of millions of people have watched his videos and completed

his training courses.

Brendon is also the star and executive producer of the online YouTube show, The Charged Life,

and the podcast of the same name, which debuted at number one on iTunes. His latest book is

called High-Performance Habits: How Extraordinary People Become That Way.

Brendon!

What?

It's so good to have you here!

Thank you. This is so pretty up here. I can't believe how awesome it is.

I know. But this is like – this is fun, because this is actually the second time that

you're on the show. But last time we did this, we did Skype-o-rama.

Yes. And yours cut out like halfway through.

Of course it did.

But I loved it because you still aired it, so you had my face there. And I'm at home.

I wasn't sure – I don't think I knew it was a Skype interview. And I had this shirt

and it was open like, my hair was like over here.

You were great. We had so much fun. I wish you'd told me – I'm gonna block

out my face, Brendon. I would've been like, "Oh, dude. Block out mine. This is great."

That was called technical difficulties.

Yes.

Anyway, my point being I'm so happy that we're doing this right now.

Thank you.

First of all, I need to congratulate you. So your sixth book. Right? High Performance

Habits.

Sixth. Yes.

This is a great beast.

It's a beast.

But I want to congratulate you because it's fantastic.

Thank you.

So talk to me about why. What inspired this book and why now?

Uh, yeah. I mean, every one of my books have been completely different. You know, one's

Life's Golden Tickets, like this parable. It's a story. The Charge was based on some

neuroscience. The last one, Motivation Manifesto, was like philosophy, you know, injected with

like warrior-ism.

But this one I said, "you know what I want to do is I actually want to empirically test

whether what I believe leads to high performance is true or not." Because I think at some

point with our platforms, you know, we can all share what we know from our life experience,

and that's really incredible and it's valuable. It's important what we do. And

then I have to think we have to at some point say, "but is it true and are there nuances

that research would prove out?"

And so this became the world's largest study ever on high performance. Last three years

of my life, a full academic team … and all we did is survey, interview, survey, interview,

run the data. Survey, interview, survey, interview, run the data. Largest ever not even comparable

by over 100,000 people is what we did. And what we teased out was that there's only

six habits that actually empirically can be proven lead to high performance. That's

– high performance just means long-term success.

Yup. Sustainable.

Sustained long-term success, which is huge. But so I've been teaching high performance

academy for eight, nine years. And the good thing about doing research is there were some

things I taught, they were wrong. And there are some things I taught, there was just so

much nuance to it, now I can teach it better.

And also I think a lot of people want to know in personal development, is any of this provable?

I think that's why positive psychology is so important. And we had researches from University

of Pennsylvania helping us with this. So they just want to know is this – is it real?

Yeah.

And we teased out over 21 different habits, and then we asked, can it be replicable? Meaning

are high performers who are doing this, are they just freaking amazing?

Yup.

Or can you practice that? Then we said is it actually effective across domains, meaning

is this – would this prove out true for an athlete versus an assistant versus, you

know, a barista versus the CEO in Fortune 50? Which it did.

Then we asked is it something that's trainable? Like can we empirically prove it can – you

can take somebody here over to here in a couple of weeks on this particular item? And we ran

all the research and it came down to these six high performers in the book. Or, high

performance habits in the book. And I'm super excited about it, because it's done.

It was three years and it nearly killed me.

I remember our texts back and forth while you were creating this, but I – you did

a phenomenal job. But let's – I want to tag onto something that you mentioned. It

was actually my next question, but it weaves in nicely with what you discovered.

I was curious throughout this journey, was there anything that surprised you? And one

thing that you mentioned, you're like, "hey. There were some things that I thought were

in the 'yes' column" that you discovered based on the research are not. So I'm curious

if you can tell us a little bit about what surprised you and what…

It was three years of surprises. I mean, the ah-ha's I had going through this journey

were so great, but it was difficult. You know, it made me – I mean, I was away from family

and friends. I didn't get to see you. It's been – I mean, you mentioned our last interview.

I've basically been doing research since then. I mean, it's just been really, really

intense.

But the learnings kept me going even though I didn't get to see family and friends as

much, because I was just – every day was, "Oh, what? Oh, that's a thing?" And,

for example, big ones. Big biases I had that were wrong, and you're not gonna like this

one and no one's going to like it. But creativity is not strongly correlated with high performance.

I would have … three years, I would argue. I mean, I would've been – I would have

passionately argued against it, because I'm a creative.

Yeah.

This is my life. I write, I train, I speak. That's what – I would've argued forever.

I've designed all the covers of my books.

Yeah.

I mean, I dork out about design. I design all my webpages. I'm – I believe that

creativity must give the edge, and it does give an edge in certain circumstances, for

sure. But I interviewed a Fortune 50 CTO, chief technology officer. Unbelievably high-performing

people. Their stock is off the roof. And what he said, he goes, "Brendon, I'm not a

creative person. My team isn't particularly creative." But long-term success matters

just as much about execution and consistency and showing up as the creative edge. The creative

edge might get you in the game. Because, remember, high performance is long-term success. We're

not studying initial success. It's very – initial success, you know, grit, creativity,

originality. All these things, very important. The spark, the get you in the game, for sure.

But even Jim Rohn said, you know, "motivation gets you in the game, habits keep you there."

And creativity as a habit – the spark that might be called original creativity, it might

only happen for us every two to three years. So that's not sufficient. We've got to

show up on Monday and Tuesday and Wednesday. Execution is more important as an example.

So we talk about the kinds of creativity that actually matter, but it's not strongly correlated

almost across all industries. And I would have completely argued with that.

Another one, you know, we tend to think – I would have thought the older you get the more

likely it is you're a high performer, because wisdom.

Yeah.

There's a lot of old, lazy people.

Yup.

You know?

Stuck in their ways. Doing the same thing that they've been doing day in and day out.

Yeah. So I think there's a lot of demographic things I would have – I would have assumed

certain countries. We did – this includes research from 195 countries. We wanted this

to be global and we wanted the largest one ever. And I would've thought certain countries,

you know, we all have like, you know, I buy lots of cool Scandinavian furniture. That

doesn't quite necessarily mean anything. Right? We make these assumptions about things, and

so we dispel a lot of it.

And the good news is, all six habits are things everyone can do. They're not innate, they're

not like "you're lucky and born with that." And everything that we learned that, you know,

when people have an excuse they say, well, "I'm too young." Or they say...

"I'm too old."

"Or I'm from this demographic, I'm from that town." None of that matters. And we

proved it. We said these are the only things that matter. And that's what excites me

about it is because I can now share these little nuances and people go, "Oh, that's

what matters and that will help me get ahead."

Yeah. And it levels the playing field for all of us. And I feel like that's one of

the other things I really appreciate about the book.

You know, you wrote that "achievement is not the problem, alignment is." Can we talk

about that a little bit?

Yeah. I wish it was my line. It was one of my clients. She's – I mean, she manages

over 10,000 people. Like, she has 10,000 direct reports. She's just an unbelievable achiever.

And when I started working with her, I mean, just like a lot of people, their struggles

aren't "can I make a goal list and a checklist" and, you know, "can I get things done."

Because people get stuff done all the time, but our busy work isn't always our life's

work.

And so you have to learn that we have to find that thing that we can align to. And a lot

of people, they're achieving themselves into the wrong thing. They put the ladder

against the wrong building. They just haven't really figured out what's important to them.

And, most importantly, alignment also includes harmony in your life. Because a lot of people

achieve and achieve in their career, and then they're divorced. People achieve and achieve

and achieve, and they're fat and they didn't take care of themselves, and they know it.

And it sounds horrible to say it, but they know it. And so you have to figure out like,

"okay, how can we align ourselves to something that we really care about?" And not align

like sometimes on a Monday or a Tuesday, or not just in our career but really get our

relationships, our health, our career all in alignment to help us become in high performing.

Because high performing isn't just achievement for achievement's sake.

Right.

What we found in that study is high performers also value well-being more than almost any

other demographics that we've ever measured. And you and I know that, but it's actually

the second habit in here is the ability to generate energy. And that's mental, physical,

and emotional energy. And we can talk about the nuances in all of that.

Yeah, that's actually some place I want to go next, but I don't want to cut you off

because you're on a train.

Yeah. No, that's it. I mean, it's so important. And so when we say alignment we don't just

mean choosing the right thing. We mean generally creating some kind of harmonious alignment

in your life. I don't use, you know, I wouldn't say that in the book, but that, you know,

that's really what it is.

It really is, because, you know, in thinking about how each of us define success, it's

such a unique thing. But those components of health and your family and how you feel

every day and the meaningfulness of it, it has to be there.

So I say for people watching, if you're in this place where you're – you really

feel like you're struggling but you're like, "Damn, I'm working so hard," I

would say what she said to me. You know, "achievement is not the problem, alignment is." Once

we got her aligned, I mean, her life came back. I mean, literally this person felt like

their life was a waste, like they had spent 20 years doing something that wasn't the

right thing. And there's a lot of guilt and shame and frustration there.

And but I'm like you're a badass, but she didn't feel right because she wasn't

in alignment. As soon as we got her in alignment, I mean, literally weeks, she changed. I mean,

you would have thought she had, you know, some Renaissance of the mind. And it wasn't

that many things. Just sometimes you're actually not off by, you know, 50 feet like

you think you are. You're off by like four or five degrees. And if we can align your

relationships, your career, and your health back into the right angle for you, you come

back to life.

Yeah. It's huge. One of the distinctions I loved in the book was about emotions and

feelings and how you parsed through that. And your framework, and I'll paraphrase

here so feel free to correct, emotions are instinctual. Like they often just appear.

Right? Where feelings relate to our interpretation and we can better influence them. I'd love

you to talk a little bit about that, because I think it's a really important distinction,

especially as it's related to energy and this idea of high performance.

Yes. One of the major, major keys we found, the first high performing habit, is seek clarity.

And what we found is one of the practices that high performers do is they define the

feeling they're after. And so when we had explained that and later talk about in the

energy chapter, we had to differentiate between feelings and emotions. And they are different.

Emotions tend to be – they're the same.

Yeah.

Like we – they're physical, they're almost always automatic, even though in the

brain is creating associations as often happen, for us they just kinda…

Emotion comes up.

Yeah. You're watching a movie and you're sad. And you're like, "Oh, my gosh,"

you know? "I'm crying." You didn't even have the tissues ready, you're just like

– you know? But feelings are usually interpretations that we make of what that emotion was and

how it sticks and the meaning we give to it. And the example I used – you know I like

to give, and I don't remember if it's in the book or not, honestly. Because here's

what's happened, this book is 400 pages. It was 1,481 when I finished.

Ooh, baby! You edited down!

Yes. And it was 1,481 good. Complete. It was like awesome.

Yes.

But I was like that's gonna freak people out. So we're publishing a bunch in academic

journals later, and I just stripped it down to 400 pages so it's more readable and fun

and learnable. So I can't remember if this one actually made it in there, but the example

I like to give is if you and I go to a haunted house.

Yeah. Which I love.

I love them. I love them. And they scare me to crap, but if you and I walk around, you

know, you walk around the walls in a haunted house, someone jumps out at you. You and I

are both gonna jump.

Yes. We are emotionally going to experience fright

immediately. It's gonna be there. Right? But I might be freaked out for the next five

minutes, and you might be laughing. Why? It's the meaning and feeling that we've defined

it as. That's fine for everybody.

Here's the issue that people have and you have to be careful about when we start talking

about energy, because emotional energy is real. And that is, look, if at 6 – we go

to a haunted house at, you know, 5 PM in the afternoon. If at 9 PM now you're in your

house, you're alone, but you're completely safe, and you still feel scared, that's

not the haunted house's problem. That is the way that you are defining and working

through your own emotions. You had the emotion of terror and fear and you're still experiencing

that feeling? That's a mental job, not an emotional job.

So your job is to go, "Wow, I'm at my house. I've lived here for 10 years. I've

never been threatened in this house. This is a safe place. I've got to redefine the

feeling I'm gonna experience." And I work with one – an Olympic sprinter, gold medalist

Olympic sprinter, as a client. And this person's huge breakthrough in getting better and going

from literally one Olympics before not medaling at all to now gold. I said, "What made – like,

what was the thing?"

Yeah.

And one of the things they said to me was I learned to define the feeling. And I said,

"What do you mean by that?" And he basically said, you know, "if – if there's a bunch

of us at the starting blocks and we're all in perfect poise and perfect condition, the

one to bet on is the one that says, 'This is the way I want to feel in this race right

now. I know my emotions are going crazy, like my heart's beating, I can hear everybody,

I'm waiting for that shot blast, I can see my goal. I know how important this is' and

all these – like their emotions are there. But that person is defining the feeling. 'I'm

going to feel centered now. I'm going to get myself in the zone now.'" Even though

the anxiety is – the emotion of anxiety is there for all Olympic-level competitors,

all of them. But they define that emotion as a feeling that helps give them a performance

edge, and I think that's important too. You know, Bruce Springsteen says if he's

ever backstage and doesn't feel like nerves, he's gonna hang it up.

Yeah.

But that's anxiety, he's just defining it differently.

Yeah. There's so much power in that, and I think it's such a great lesson. That's

why I loved it in the book. It's like we all have those experiences. You know, sometimes

we'll be shooting MarieTV and I can feel – like I'll tell the crew all the time,

you know, when we go on I'm like, "Oh, I'm feeling nervous." But it is – for

me, nervousness, I associate it with excitement. I associate it with "we're about to do

something amazing." There's aliveness, there's energy, there's all this great

stuff coming through. But I loved that distinction. I never heard anyone quite make it the way

that you did, and I really appreciated that because I feel like it gives us a chance to

take some of our power back.

Yes.

Where, hey, the emotion comes up whether it is fear, it's sadness, it's anger, but

then, okay. What about the long term? How are you going to then help yourself interpret

it and then walk back into the world in a way that's going to allow you to perform

at a high level?

Yeah. Another related habit, third habit, is to basically raise necessity. It's a

fancy way of saying high performers perform better because they feel like they must do

it.

Yes.

And there's this interchange between their identity and what they value, believe, and

feel are important. And then an external demand for them to do better. And what happens is

they say – their identity says, "I really care about excellence. I have high standards.

I want to do a good job here. This is important to me. I love this," and then it connects

with external demand. Need to do a good job. There is a deadline. "I feel a social duty

or a spirit or calling."

People are depending on me.

Yes, "people are depending on me." And when those two come together right in the

middle, that's necessity. We would call it performance necessity. It's like "I

need to do a good job here and I'm motivated by that, not scared by that." It's a perfect

little connection. There's a whole chapter on it in the book. And what often happens

for people is that emotional thing we're talking about earlier, like that Olympian.

That Olympian, that emotion, that anxiety is – they're using that to raise their

necessity to do better. They're like "I'm going to use this feeling I have and transform

it to do better."

Yes.

Even though everyone else would identify that same emotion as I'm scared, they're gonna

say "this feeling is going to make me focus. This feeling that I want to have right now,

I'm gonna, you know, put my a-game on." And it's so cool, because all the high performers

I interviewed, over 300, literally verified high performers. We used objective measures

whether they were highest performing in their company or whether they'd filled out the

high performance indicator. And we have this assessment now that can basically show these

– you're probably a high performer if you score in these areas in these six different

habits. And interviewed over 300 of them, and every one of them at some point in the

interview – and these are structured, academic interviews, so they're way less fun than

this. Sorry for everyone who I interviewed but, boy, it's just different.

And what I found out was every one of them talked about that at some point. Taking what

they were experiencing and transforming it into something that gave them performance

edge. Whether it's an artist readying themselves to touch the canvas. Like there's a thing

that says, "I want to be a great artist. I want to do a great job." And that self

talk is leveling up our necessity.

Lots of people have amazing strengths, but they don't get off the couch because they

don't feel it's necessary to win, necessary to succeed, necessary to serve. And high performers

feel like "it is necessary that I show up today, I do a good job, I help others."

Sometimes some answer it in a spiritual realm. "They say I feel called to do this. I feel

it is my mission. I feel God is giving me these gifts, and I don't wanna waste that."

And that for them is a very spiritual, emotional connection to "it's necessary for me to

kick some butt, do well, deliver." Other people, they've really got to mentally get

themselves in that. I'm a little in between. I have to say things to myself before I walk

into a situation to make me better. Like before I came through those doors, like you have

a bathroom out there, and I went in the bathroom and I do a little self talk to myself. And

I bounce in place and I take 10 deep breaths. And I'm talking to myself so that I'm

just – I'm ready.

Yeah. I thought there's a great distinction there too. Another little tip from the book

that I think is very useful. You found that when you talk to yourself in the third person

versus the you, can you explain that a little bit?

Yeah. A research study in psychology found out that both second person and third person

makes you more – makes yourself talk more powerfully. So if you're gonna do affirmations

you wouldn't just say, "I want to do this. I want to do this." You want to do what

we call in the book self coaching where you would say, you know, in my case, "Brendon.

It's important you do a good job here today because you usually don't do interviews. And

you really love Marie and you want to do a good job for her and her people. And this

is a book you worked on for three years and it's important it does well. And, Brendon,

don't forget you're so lucky you get to do this, brother. So just enjoy the process.

You're so lucky, Brendon." That's a different level of going, "I'm lucky.

I'm lucky." Right? It is.

"I'm Brendon. I'm great."

Yes. Another one I do every morning in the shower, assuming I take a shower. But every

morning in the shower…

Because we all don't every day. No we do not.

It doesn't happen.

It does not happen.

I told you like 24 hours ago I was sitting in a bar in the woods at a friend's house.

But the second thing I ask myself in the shower every morning is, "what might happen today

that could trip me up? And how are you going to bring your best self to that, Brendon?"

I say that every morning in the shower to myself and it just helps me anticipate. You

know, something's gonna go wrong during the day.

Absolutely.

And if I already know – like this morning's was, "okay. You're in I think what we"

– I'd guess north Manhattan? Where I'm staying, would you call it north?

You're uptown.

I'm uptown.

And you're coming to – let's just call it downtown.

Okay. So I'm, okay, that's going to be 45 minutes. It's a hot, summer day. I'm

gonna get hot and I know when I'm hot sometimes I get impatient and I get stressed. And I

don't want to feel that. "So just pay attention to how you're feeling on your way down to

the interview with Marie, Brendon. And really just engage. Pay attention. Be present with

New York and really enjoy that you're here."

I know that sounds completely crazy, but every high-performing athlete does it. Every salesperson

does it. I mean at a high level. Every person I interview who are at what we call the top

15% of all high performers, they all self talk. And most of them, we found, were doing

it in second and third person. Which is amazing.

I love it.

Yeah.

I think it's so fun.

Yeah. Little things. Yeah. So if you already talk to yourself and you say your name to

yourself, you're not crazy. You're probably high performing.

Well, I do talk to myself and I do call myself Marie. So I'm gonna raise my hand and get

into that group.

I want to talk about another takeaway from the book I think is so practical and that

our audience is going to love. And I love this, and we've done this together when

you and I hang out. It's about managing transitions. And when you're moving from

one project to the next or you're ending your work day and then you're going back

into quote unquote family life or whatever that transition is, I thought you have a really

effective way to help people maximize and almost amplify their energy so they don't

come away feeling depleted every day. Because I feel like we've both been there. Right?

We've done the way where you are putting out your best and you are absolutely focused

and your heart's in it and your soul's in it, but then you reach the end of the day

and you're like, "I'm done." Yes.

You're done.

So tell me about transitions.

Yeah. Transitions takes place in the chapter of generate energy, and also – maybe it's

in productivity too. And it has this – it's just this conversation that if you're go,

go, go, go, go all the time, you're depleting energy all day and you don't know it. And

lots of people think to get more energy or be more productive, they have to radically

change their life. "I'd better work out an extra 60 minutes in the morning."

It's like, actually, let me teach you the mastery of managing transitions. When you

go from one activity to another I want to teach you this simple thing, and that is release

tension, set intention. Very simple.

Let me give an example, because it really helps. If you're doing email and, you know,

that takes one part of your psyche and brain to do a lot of email, and now you're going

to go create that keynote or that PowerPoint presentation that you want to be flowing and

visual and beautiful. Very different things. What most people do is they'll do their

email and then they'll work a little on the presentation. And then the notification

will go over here and they'll go back to the email, and they're multitasking.

Yes.

And they're wrecking not only their measurable creativity, but their long-term performance.

And so what you have to do is when you finish the email, stop it. Okay? Maybe go get some

water, come back, or whatever – even if you don't, all I want you to do, push away

from your chair for a minute, close your eyes, repeat the word "release" with the goal

of releasing tension in your body. And repeat the word release to yourself several times

over and over like a mantra. Okay? Just repeat. It could be 60 seconds, it can be one minute,

it can be two minutes. Whatever you want to do.

Just do it until you feel like your body and your mind release a little bit. Then before

you open your eyes, set an intention. Say, "okay, Brendon. You're going to work on

this keynote now. Your intention is to make something that grabs them right at the beginning,

and then make it really move fast, and make it visual, and make sure that it builds emotionally

throughout the thing so when you make a call to action at the end, bam." And then open

my eyes, now work on presentation. I'm clean and free from the previous activity.

Yes.

And people will feel an unbelievable amount of energetic just power come back from there.

I interviewed – or, I've worked with a major founder in the startup Silicon Valley

world flew me down at 3 AM – I guess it was a little after midnight on a private jet.

It was – he was having a lot of trouble. Just exhausted. Literally depleted.

You know, this person is incredibly well valued in his company. Lots of employees, everyone

knows who the person would be, but miserable. Just go, go, go, go, go, go. And I said, well

– and one of his major things was he was wrecking his relationship with his wife and

his chidren. Not because he was maybe just overworking. He would just carry a lot of

the work into his house.

Yup.

So what I said, I said "I want you to pull up to your house after the day of working.

Don't get out of the car. Pull up to the house, just close your eyes, repeat the mantra release

to yourself maybe for five minutes. And then before you open your eyes, set the intention.

How do you want to be with your wife when you enter the house? What kind of dad do you

want to be to your daughter? Set that intention. Open up your eyes. Now go in as a different

man." And it changed his life. His email to me is in the book.

I read it. It's fantastic.

It just works. That means just release tension, set intention. It's just – your transitions

are where most people's bleeding out their energy, and they don't know. And if we can

just get you four or five times of transition really well throughout the day, you finish

your day like "I feel amazing."

Yes.

And we didn't caffeinate you, we didn't do anything. We just changed how you approach

your work.

So brilliant. I love it.

Thank you.

I want to talk now about a really interesting section in the book about anti-practices,

some of the problems that come. Because I think one of the challenges in our culture

– and, you know, you and I I think share a lot of values in this sense. You know, we

love to have fun, right, and love to take trips and be with our family and goof around

and laugh a lot, but there's this pervasiveness of like grind, grind, grind, hustle, hustle,

hustle. And I know we talked a little bit about that, but one of the things that you

wrote in the section about anti-practices about the things that can go wrong is the

part about "being satisfied doesn't mean settling."

And I feel like there is this mistaken notion out there that you have to be dissatisfied

if you're going to be an achiever, a high performer, if you're going to just want

to achieve all that you can in this life. And, again, we share the same philosophy.

It's like, "no. You can absolutely be satisfied … AND"

Yes. And it's important that you are.

Yes.

And we can measurely prove it. High performers are not dissatisfied strivers. They're not.

They're happy. High performers are happier than their peers. We all believe that to get

to the top it's gonna be lonely at the top, and we all believe you have to grind and kill

yourself to get there, and that's completely wrong. And the data proves that worldwide,

which is I think just overcoming a lot of people's biases about how you work today.

Because right now, especially today, you know, grind on social media is so popular.

Or hustle.

Or hustle. And it – by the way, none of the top 15% of high performers worldwide identify

with those words. They literally don't. We asked them. We did a whole keyword analysis.

This was actually pretty cool. And high performers explicitly say – these are the three driving

feelings. If we said there was a high performance state, it's driven from these three things.

Number one, full engagement. Number two, joy.

Yes!

And number three, confidence.

Yes.

That's what they relate with. Okay? That's where it's coming from. It's a joyous

journey, not a dissatisfied one. And I had this conversation in the book, because – I

kind of maybe frame it this way. Each of these chapters opens with a vignette of somebody

I worked with or a situation that I was in that demonstrated high performance.

And in this particular situation I'm walking on a stage. Thousands of people after a very

famous musician was out there, and was telling the audience that that person's secret to

success – remember, thousands of people. Their secret to – that whole speech, their

secret to success was never settle. Never settle. Nothing is enough. Never settle and

never be satisfied. Never be satisfied. Always demand more. And I'm like "oh. My second

slide, which is gonna be on Jumbotrons in like 80 point text was 'strive satisfied.'"

I'm like, "oh, I'm gonna have to dispel this for all these thousands of people."

I was totally freaked out.

Yeah.

And – but what I had to explain to people was not only the data, but it's this. If

you're never satisfied, I mean, is it true that life is precious? If it's true that

life is precious and you could be gone tomorrow, do you really want to think, "You know what?

I just never felt fulfilled. I never allowed myself to have a moment of credit. I never

allowed myself to have a moment of peace. I never allowed myself to look at that and

say good job." That's not the way to live life. I think just at a spiritual level it's

a bad move. And this book doesn't really go into a lot of that. It's more about the

science and the heart stuff.

But I think it's really important that people realize your job is to strive satisfied. And

if you strive satisfied more often, you will be more of a high performer. And if you never

give yourself credit, you're always beating up on yourself, you're always thinking "that's

not perfect enough," then what's gonna happen? Dissatisfied people burn out and they

quit more often than satisfied strivers.

So take joy in the moment, engage with what you're doing, allow credit and satisfaction

and joy to come in. You can always be improving.

Of course.

But be proving – be improving joyfully.

Yes.

And if you're improving joyfully, then you're learning, you feel curious, you feel engaged,

the joy is there. You'll get more confident because you're like "I'm going to learn

through this anyway. This is gonna be great." Because, you know, this – this thing is

all over social media right now. Like grind, work, whatever. And I'm like it's just

– it's popular, and I see why that happens, and I see why it's catchy. It's just not

scientifically valid.

Yeah. And it's not sustainable.

Not sustainable. Anyone who's done it, they all hit a wall

real fast.

And anyone who's ever been married to that or dated that or engaged with that, you're

just like can you just calm down and enjoy it for four seconds?

Yeah.

Yeah know, I think it's really important right now. People should want to have a high

level of joy and happiness in their life. But they cannot – they cannot wait for it.

I always say, you know, the power plant doesn't have energy, it generates energy. I mean,

technically it transforms energy from one medium to another, and we can do the same

thing. You know, you don't have happiness. You have to generate the happiness. You don't

have joy. You generate joy. And when you learn to take control of your power and your energy

in that way, then life becomes so much more fulfilling and so much more fun. And it doesn't

become fake or forced. Because you know what's fake and forced? This all day.

Yeah.

That's not your natural state.

Yeah.

I mean, and here's how you know. Take a person – I just got back from a big vacation

with my lady, and we were down on the beach. Take any person, put them on a beach for a

while, and they're not like grr. Your natural state is "like this is beautiful. This is

great." There's awe, there's inspiration, there is joy there. Tap back into that and

you'll be more of a high performer.

I love it. Brendon, I'm so happy to have you as a friend and just congratulations again

on this and all of your incredible work, and thank you for coming today.

Thank you. This is a joy for me to be here with you, so thank you.

Now Brendon and I would love to hear from you. We talked about so many good things today,

but what's the one single biggest insight that you're taking away from today's conversation

and, most importantly, how can you put that into action right now? Leave a comment below

and let us know.

Now, as always, the richest conversations happen after the episode over at MarieForleo.com,

so head on over there and leave a comment now. And once you're there, be sure to subscribe

to our email list and become an MF Insider. You'll get instant access to an audio I

created called How To Get Anything You Want, plus you'll get some exclusive content and

special giveaways and some personal updates from me that I just don't share anywhere else.

Stay on your game and keep going for your dreams, because the world needs that special

gift that only you have. Thank you so much for watching and I'll catch you next time

on MarieTV.

B-School is coming up. Want in? For more info and free training go to JoinBSchool.com.

You'll get used to this, Anthony. This is how I roll. You're like, "Got it!"

I'm feeling it!

Yes. Haters. Haters, delete, trash.

For more infomation >> Brendon Burchard: How to be Successful (Using Science) - Duration: 33:54.

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Bali Bowls - Daniel Wedemijer - Behind The Scenes - Duration: 8:30.

I'm happy with these images!

Right.

Alright, that's it! We can start making the drone shots now.

That mountain is sick!

I am at your disposal.

I am now a drone assistant.

Bali

I don't hate it

Nice!

Such an insane place!

The way you look around in these shots is perfect!

I can use that in combination with a voiceover of your thoughts.

Nicely done guys.

Yeah, that's in the pocket.

Would it be useful for me to bring a radio?

Very useful for you to bring a radio!

It's a bit scary to cycle around here.

I think people don't really know how to deal with

someone on a bike here.

You'll walk up the stairs.

And then we'll fly out with the drone.

We'll have the reveal of the park.

As you can see, this park is pretty sick!

So we'll take one of the intro shots with the Phantom 4 Pro.

Yeah, sick.

It's nice to fly here

and it's great that we have about 2 meters

before hitting some power lines. So relaxed.

There, and there..

This is so scary.

Normally your tire is placed against the quarter pipe,

in this case you're hanging loose, like a banana.

Dropping..

Yeah that's sick!

I think there was some dust in the headset.

The bearing broke.

This is insane.

It's got everything. Hips to the left, to the right.

From big quarters to small ones.

Good corners.

Little spine.

Skate bowl on the other side.

Walls.

It's got freaking everything.

Let's bring it home.

There's a nice shade for the film crew here!

How easy is that one?

Easy...

Another one then.

Can't you go higher? On top of the wall?

Crap...

I'm never going to get down..

Drop in!

Come on, drop in!

Yeah, it's super tight here.

Drop in man. You got it!

Ha.. I fucked up..

They'll come from over there.

Maybe I'll take a long lens shot,

when they come around the corner.

When they are here,

I'll take a wide shot, rotating.

From here, till there.

Then this will be the frame.

And then he'll pass us and Daniel will come into focus.

Cause the other shots will be wide, from the drone.

Right, and I have sufficient space.

Powerlines are over there.

And I'm curious to how far I can go that way,

while keeping line of sight.

This one, Lalapan.

Martabak, such a coincidence!

"Belanda" (Dutch)

What time is it?

Six?

Nice.

The sun is almost rising, over there.

Lightning coming off the clouds.

It's pretty insane.

I will be behind them on the side, here.

*Pagi (Good morning)

This morning we got up at 4:30

to film the sunrise.

Then we had breakfast.

And now we're at a waterfall.

It's a bit of a sketchy place to fly a drone

so I like it!

I'll use this open area to take off,

get an angle I like.

The third tree, behind that one and then come back.

I like it from inside the bowl, you get to see that rough concrete.

That was cool.

*Daniel farting*

For more infomation >> Bali Bowls - Daniel Wedemijer - Behind The Scenes - Duration: 8:30.

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Tattle and Tea - On the Absurdities of the English Language - Duration: 1:50.

The English language is a funny thing.

It's all at once very forgiving,

and at the same breath completely topsy turvy.

For instance the right to Bear arms.

Reading it, it looks wrong.

Surely bear arms have nothing to do with weaponry.

The other spelling of bare is wrong.

If you were to pick between bear and bare

you'd think bare would be the one to go with,

but you'd be wrong.

So it's not so surprising that people get things muddled with spellings.

Like pour and pore.

You can pore over a book, but not pour.

I mean surely there should be a different spelling for these, but no.

There are sometimes though, when people should know better.

I was reading a book recently, it was pretty good, it was part of a trilogy,

but the kind of book that I only felt the need to read the first one.

However I couldn't take the story seriously when they wrote how their characters

unconsciously looked around the room and decorated it.

You can't unconsciously do anything, apart from maybe dribble and snore.

But you can 'subconsciously'.

My favourite one though was waddle and daub.

Waddle and daub.

I don't know what that is, but it sounds hilarious.

Wattle and daub is a building material.

But waddle and daub sounds like a weird party game, like pin the tail on the donkey,

where you waddle up to a board and dab at it with a paint brush.

Then again, what's the weirdest English fail you've come across?

For more infomation >> Tattle and Tea - On the Absurdities of the English Language - Duration: 1:50.

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Voici Mon Canada: Canada est la diversité culturelle - Duration: 0:08.

For more infomation >> Voici Mon Canada: Canada est la diversité culturelle - Duration: 0:08.

-------------------------------------------

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine - Duration: 3:27.

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine

Fabian Mazur & Snavs - Arena | Dopamine

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