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  • No matter what you want to accomplish in life, it's going to involve discomfort.

  • A great career or business requires hard work. A healthy body needs exercise and foods you

  • don't necessarily like. Meaningful relationships need vulnerability

  • and compromises. In fact, anything worthwhile often requires

  • that you do what you don't want to do. And that can be hard.

  • But it doesn't have to be. I used to take my thoughts very seriously.

  • Whenever one of them popped into my head, I'd immediately identify with it and perceive

  • it as thetruth.” If a thought told me I was tired and bored,

  • I'd immediately look for a way out. But I've since learned that I am not my thoughts

  • and that my mind is nothing more than a suggestion box.

  • Because of that, I don't take my thoughts as seriously as I used to.

  • And that, in turn, has made a huge difference in my subsequent behavior and the results

  • I get. These days, when my mind tells me I'm restless

  • and should do something else, I simply thank it for the suggestion and then get back to

  • the task at hand. It's never the discomfort that stops you;

  • it's how you perceive the discomfort. Your beliefs determine your response, and

  • what you choose to believe is within your control.

  • You can assign whatever meaning you want to discomfort.

  • I used to believe it was a signal that I should stop.

  • These days, I believe it's a signal that I should keep going.

  • I've decided that anytime I feel discomfort, that just means I've stepped into my mental

  • gym, and that it's time for my mental resistance training.

  • Willpower is a lot like muscle power. The more you exercise it, the stronger it will

  • get. If you practice it for an extended period

  • of time, you can change your behavior around completely.

  • You'll be able to do what others dread doing and to stay away from things that others can't

  • resist doing. That level of self-control is exactly what's

  • needed to become a remarkable person and create extraordinary results.

  • So, how do you get started? The best way to practice mental resistance

  • training is through voluntary hardship. Here are a few examples: Underdress for cold

  • weather. Turn off the air conditioning in your house

  • or car. Take cold showers. Occasional fasting.

  • Drink only water. Sleep without a pillow. High-intensity exercise. These are just a

  • few ideas to help you come up with your personal mental resistance training.

  • The important thing is that you choose one and commit to it.

  • And just like in a physical gym, you don't want to use the heaviest weights right away.

  • There's no point getting overwhelmed or injured. So, start small and then get a little bit

  • every day. If your willpower muscle is weak right now,

  • it's perfectly fine to start by making your bed each morning.

  • Or reading one page in a book. Or flossing one tooth.

  • If you're thinking to yourself right now: “I'm not the kind of person who practices

  • voluntary discomfort,” be very mindful of the fact that this is the same voice you want

  • to take control over. Don't take it as literal truth. Remember — it's

  • just a suggestion. And it's entirely within your power what you

  • do with that suggestion. If you choose to take action despite what

  • your mind is telling you, it holds no power over you.

  • You can decide to perceive discomfort as mental resistance training from this moment forward.

  • And each time you push through the resistance, you'll notice that you'll get a little bit

  • stronger. If you stick to the practice consistently,

  • with time, it'll become second nature to do what you don't want to do.

  • You'll become a relentless action-taker. And that's when you can turn your most desired

  • goals into reality.

  • Mastering any physical skill, be it performing a pirouette, playing an instrument, or throwing

  • a baseball, takes practice. Practice is the repetition of an action with

  • the goal of improvement, and it helps us perform with more ease, speed, and confidence.

  • So what does practice do in our brains to make us better at things?

  • Our brains have two kinds of neural tissue: grey matter and white matter.

  • The grey matter processes information in the brain, directing signals and sensory stimuli

  • to nerve cells, while white matter is mostly made up of fatty tissue and nerve fibers.

  • In order for our bodies to move, information needs to travel from the brain's grey matter,

  • down the spinal cord, through a chain of nerve fibers called axons to our muscles.

  • So how does practice or repetition affect the inner workings of our brains?

  • The axons that exist in the white matter are wrapped with a fatty substance called myelin.

  • And it's this myelin covering, or sheath, that seems to change with practice.

  • Myelin is similar to insulation on electrical cables.

  • It prevents energy loss from electrical signals that the brain uses, moving them more efficiently

  • along neural pathways. Some recent studies in mice suggest that the

  • repetition of a physical motion increases the layers of myelin sheath that insulates

  • the axons. And the more layers, the greater the insulation

  • around the axon chains, forming a sort of superhighway for information connecting your

  • brain to your muscles. So while many athletes and performers attribute

  • their successes to muscle memory, muscles themselves don't really have memory.

  • Rather, it may be the myelination of neural pathways that gives these athletes and performers

  • their edge with faster and more efficient neural pathways.

  • There are many theories that attempt to quantify the number of hours, days, and even years

  • of practice that it takes to master a skill. While we don't yet have a magic number, we

  • do know that mastery isn't simply about the amount of hours of practice.

  • It's also the quality and effectiveness of that practice.

  • Effective practice is consistent, intensely focused, and targets content or weaknesses

  • that lie at the edge of one's current abilities. So if effective practice is the key, how can

  • we get the most out of our practice time? Try these tips.

  • Focus on the task at hand. Minimize potential distractions by turning

  • off the computer or TV and putting your cell phone on airplane mode.

  • In one study, researchers observed 260 students studying.

  • On average, those students were able to stay on task for only six minutes at a time.

  • Laptops, smartphones, and particularly Facebook were the root of most distractions.

  • Start out slowly or in slow-motion. Coordination is built with repetitions, whether

  • correct or incorrect. If you gradually increase the speed of the

  • quality repetitons, you have a better chance of doing them correctly.

  • Next, frequent repetitions with allotted breaks are common practice habits of elite performers.

  • Studies have shown that many top athletes, musicians, and dancers spend 50-60 hours per

  • week on activities related to their craft. Many divide their time used for effective

  • practice into multiple daily practice sessions of limited duration.

  • And finally, practice in your brain in vivid detail.

  • It's a bit surprising, but a number of studies suggest that once a physical motion has been

  • established, it can be reinforced just by imagining it.

  • In one study, 144 basketball players were divided into two groups.

  • Group A physically practiced one-handed free throws while Group B only mentally practiced

  • them. When they were tested at the end of the two

  • week experiment, the intermediate and experienced players in both groups had improved by nearly

  • the same amount. As scientists get closer to unraveling the

  • secrets of our brains, our understanding of effective practice will only improve.

  • In the meantime, effective practice is the best way we have of pushing our individual

  • limits, achieving new heights, and maximizing our potential.

  • Hello, guys, my name is 朱威誠 and my student ID number is 107AB0728.

  • Let's get started today I want to share two videos to you one of the videos is named "This

  • is How to Do Things You Don't Want to Do" and the second one called "How to practice

  • effectively...for just about anything "these two videos are two of my favorite in all 8

  • videos which I chose.

  • Let's talk about the first video. After I watched it I feel like I need to train my

  • willpower more constantly so I don't need to fight with my mind every time when I need

  • to do a thing which I hate to do or I try to be lazy if I can use my willpower to do

  • everything on time I know I will be a better person in every way.

  • The second video I want to introduce named "How to practice effectively...for just about

  • anything " and After I watched this video I feel like I should start trying to turn

  • off my phone when I studying or when I learning new thing it should make me learn more easily

  • and quickly if I can learn faster and efficient then I can have more time to use that will

  • make my life more easy at the same time.

  • Let's my opinion about these two videos hope you like it and thanks for watching.

No matter what you want to accomplish in life, it's going to involve discomfort.

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