The One Learning Technique That Scared The Heck Out of Bruce Lee
Once a week I crush my 13 year old at tennis until she cries.
I feel I only have a one or two year window to do this. Then she will conquer and destroy and laugh at me.
So give me my chance.
Sometimes I hit the ball as hard as possible so she can't run fast enough with her tiny legs.
Other times I aim straight at her so the ball either hits her ("ow!") or she has to jump out of the way.
Sometimes she yells. "I hate tennis!" and then she starts to cry.
I don't know why, but when we get to that point I feel happy.
Because then I can comfort her.
– – –
Some people have told me, "let the kid win sometimes."
I don't like to do that. When my dad used to do that to me I could tell. I would throw the racket at him. Or I would throw the pieces off the chessboard. I was 21 years old.
There's two ways to learn: passively and aggressively.
Passively is when you study your mistakes, read the history of what you are learning, network, find your "tribe", find a mentor, etc.
Aggressively is right when you are in the middle of it. You're neck deep and the ball is coming at you: what do you do?
Passively is in your head. Aggressively is noticing RIGHT NOW and taking action.
In your head is important. But ACTION is what creates heroes.
– – –
One time I was thrown right into the middle of a huge multi-million line software project. We were programming Time Warner's "interactive TV" experiment in Orlando.
Now everyone just turns on their Apple TV and starts streaming. Think of this as the first version of that. I had no clue what I was doing and I had to learn fast or be fired.
In my arrogance I suggested to my boss that Time Warner should use "The Internet" to deliver video to customer homes. This was in 1994.
My boss said, "James! The Internet is great for academics. But these cable guys know what they are doing. Trust that they know better than you."
So I had to learn all of these programming techniques very fast (or I would be fired) that ended up helping me for many years after.
Another time I was CEO of a company that was about to miss payroll. I would wake up in the middle of the night adding up numbers to see if we would make it. If we would survive. If I would survive.
I had never sold anything in my life. I had to learn how to be a salesman very quickly or we wouldn't meet payroll.
I don't know if I did a very good job at it. But I had to learn very fast so at least I wouldn't be bad at it. I'm still learning.
In the past 30 years of teaching people and also learning things under pressure I have found four AGGRESSIVE techniques to learn something very quickly.
Here they are:
THE BRUCE LEE TECHNIQUE
Bruce Lee said, "I don't fear the man who has practiced 10,000 kicks. I fear the man who practiced one kick 10,000 times."
Mollie was having trouble using her backhand to return a serve.
So I bought 200 tennis balls and had her stand on the left side of the court. I served 200 times to the left side of the left box.
Over and over. We didn't rally. As soon as she hit back I served the next ball. Maybe a little harder or with more spin.
She returned maybe 5% of them and started crying. "I'm horrible!" she said.
"Don't worry," I told her. "Your brain is what learned today but your body learns when you sleep."
So yesterday we did it again. Now she returned about 60% of the balls. She was smiling the whole time. "I got better!" she said.
"Don't worry," I told her. "You're going to get worse also."
"Don't be sad when you fail and be happy when you succeed. Both are going to happen again and again at every new level."
If we had just played games, she never would've gotten enough experience using her backhand to return a serve. Now she's learning what she needs to learn.
When I was learning chess, my instructor would put two pawns and a rook on the board versus his rook and told me to try and beat him.
Then he put the two pawns in a different part of the board. Then a different part of the board. For four hours just two pawns and a rook versus a rook.
Did I learn how to win with a rook and two pawns? Maybe.
But I also learned a little more of the subtleties of what a rook is good for. Or which pawns might be ever so slightly more important than other pawns. Or the power of the king when few pieces are on the board. Of the power of my brain calculating many moves ahead when only a few pieces are on the board.
Sunlight doesn't just hit you. When you open the window the sunlight hits everything in your house.
When you open the window of learning, you don't learn just the specific thing you are trying to see. You begin to see everything that is now lit.
The real art is paying attention to all of the things you can now see. Now that the sunlight is pouring in.
When I dropped Mollie off she said, "I had fun." And she said, "I love you Daddy".
– – –
I woke up at 1 in the morning last night and I had an idea for a post. I reached for my pad and pen but I fell out of bed and onto the floor. "Ow!" The pad was gone.
So I went downstairs and typed the four parts of the post into the computer. It was about "4 techniques for Aggressive Learning".
I wrote down the techniques and sent it to myself via email.
What I wrote down:
"BRUCE LEE TECHNIQUE
TONY ROBBINS TECHNIQUE
THE MODIFY TECHNIQUE
COACH YOUR FUTURE SELF"
I sort of forget now what the fourth one means.
And I've already taken up enough space with the first one so I'll do the other three some other time. Maybe.
When you have an idea you have to write it down IMMEDIATELY.
I usually say, "I'll remember in the morning."
Not once in my life have I remembered anything in the morning.
Even now, I don't fully remember what I meant and I have the email right in front of me.
When you get a "mental download" you have to:
- Save it
- Write it
- Teach it to someone else
As quickly as possible. Else you will forget it.
For instance, many people write me and say, "I can't remember anything I read in a book."
That's natural. You have to read it. Then teach it to someone else. Then THE NEXT DAY teach it to someone else.
That's the only way to learn what is in the book.
After serving other 200 times to Mollie yesterday, I don't really care whether she learned or not. ("I love you Daddy").
All I know is: By the time we were done I learned how to serve better.
– – –
The author also wrote about The Ultimate Cheat Sheet for Mastery. Read more from the author… James Altucher, an entrepreneur, investor and best-selling author of "Choose Yourself" and "Choose Yourself Guide To Wealth". He openly discusses the financial and emotional impact of making (and losing) money in his personal blog at JamesAltucher.com.
H?tellerie | Restauration | FINTECH
9 年James Altucher ur daughter is going to be a very successful person(personally and professionally)... having u and Claudia as her parents!
Co-Founder @Synchronicity.co, Inc. & BOS
9 年I also played a little tennis...in college and for the "B" team at our Country club for only a couple years. So I can really appreciate the way you are teaching Molly. Maybe you've seen the new Serena Williams Gatorade ads? Pretty modern as ads go and the story is inspiring.
Co-Founder @Synchronicity.co, Inc. & BOS
9 年I remember Time Warner's "interactive TV" experiment in Orlando. We incorporated SpotMagic that same year (1994). They blew so much money on that thing and got bupkis. We invented the first national media distribution biz in 1992, but after that, we went on to perfect Interactive TV--with up to millions of simultaneous connections at once with the computer activity always in perfect sync with the over the air Broadcast. That was in 1999. Still have it. Lesson? You can invent a great product...but people have to want it and pay for it. We use the same technology now for a different delivery business. It's all how you frame it's usefulness. btw, I joined Claudia's Yoga channel. She's so knowledgeable. Also, I turned in a psychopath today that had a whole channel devoted to hating you & was stalking you with hate speech. You have to be careful with those people and shut them down quick.
Leader, Creative, Improving Processes to Better People's Lives
9 年Hello James, I have experienced both. I can say with certainty that if the person is tested in an environment where they feel safe, (molly was with her dad), and they are given feed back as they continue to practice, the trial by fire method can work very well. You may highlight the inadequacies but you may discover some strengths this way too. In an unsafe environment it can absolutely go downhill and be very detrimental to the individual. It tears at their self esteem and motivation. Everyone learns a bit differently. The key is to know how you learn, and try to utilize this to your own advantage. -Best Regards, Hannah
One of 7.95+Billion People...
9 年At first I felt a little objectional to the concept of destroying a person through exercising every ounce of superiority that one has. While it may be the most effective way to learn 'per instance', it can have a very acidic effect on a person's motivation to continue trying. On the other hand there is certainly merit to the concept of fire-testing a person. Perhaps it is only through highlighting the full extent his or her inadequacies that the fullest awarness of the mountain to be climbed may be attained. Also the testing of one's resolve to go the full distance. The forging of the soul, so to speak. Thank you kindly for sharing yet another experience and lesson.