Hey there fellow listeners, have some timestamps :) 00:00 Introduction 01:15 Sponsors 07:35 What’s the etymology of the word “hack,” and how does it relate to Seth’s new book, The Practice? 09:21 What is the specific definition of the word “quality,” and how does it differ from its generally accepted meaning? 12:40 What makes Lin-Manuel Miranda’s Broadway blockbuster Hamilton more “magical,” in Seth’s estimation, than West Side Story? Perhaps the real question: what is magic, and what does it take to make it? 16:49 Why hiding behind words like “quality” or “perfection” as a means of postponing action to avoid risk is a cop-out - especially these days. 19:18 What Isaac Asimov and Gary Gilmore can teach us about writer’s block and other common procrastinations. 24:59 Examining what we mean when we tell ourselves our work isn’t “good enough,” weighing the real reasons we might opt to take a less challenging path, what it sometimes takes to get us back on the right path, and why generosity doesn’t mean free. 33:21 “Process saves us from the poverty of our intentions.” -Elizabeth King 35:08 On the selfishness of authenticity, and why Seth believes the way we act determines how we feel way more often than the way we feel determines how we act. 36:32 If attitudes are skills, how do we sharpen them? 40:47 Skills with a disproportionate return on investment that entrepreneurs and creatives should consider cultivating. 43:15 On anxiety and the futility of reassurance. 45:58 One of the biggest mistakes ineffective teachers make, and what we should remember if we want to be effective learners. 50:06 The importance of applying constraints and boundaries to the learning process, and understanding the gift that tension gives. 53:14 How do you not steal the revelation as a teacher, but create tension so that people will plow ahead with developing a skill or learning something? 57:46 Examples of how the power of positive constraints have had an impact on Seth - and how they went from being a source of frustration to the core of his useful working life. 1:00:27 How would Seth usher a prospective entrepreneur through the process of deciding on constraints before they embark on creating some darling that they’re not willing to kill? 1:03:15 How can an entrepreneur or freelancer apply constraints when their plans are already in motion? 1:06:09 A nugget from The Practice: Seek joy. But how does one do this? 1:08:04 As someone who’s succeeded in zigging where others have zagged, How has Seth chosen the games he has played, and in what ways has this changed over time? 1:11:07 What provided Seth with a template to understand the difference between doing fulfilling work and simply training for the outcome? For that matter, what’s so bad about training for the outcome? 1:16:14 The Practice is Seth’s 20th book. What is he saying in this one that he didn’t get around to in the 20 before, and what should prospective readers hope to get from it? 1:19:06 How would Seth suggest someone literally learn how to juggle, and how does this process figuratively encapsulate the building of resilience necessary for thriving in an ever-changing world? 1:21:32 How the way I learned to swim - in my 30s - was similarly counterintuitive but completely effective (and by coincidence, the technique Seth uses to swim every day). 1:25:13 In what ways is cultivating creativity similar to learning how to juggle? 1:26:49 How does Seth separate genre from generic, and who was Earl Stanley Gardner? 1:29:40 With 230 chapters in less than 230 pages, which ones does Seth hope most resonate with readers? 1:33:01 How Joni Mitchell alienated her mainstream audience in order to find her smallest viable audience and, ultimately, do better work that didn’t train for the outcome. 1:34:47 What would you do even if you knew you would fail? 1:35:54 Parting thoughts. Copied from tim.blog/2020/10/26/seth-godin-the-practice/, converted using an online tool
Lots of mind expanding moments I can apply as a content creator! My top takeaway was around pedagogy. Good teachers don't just dump everything they know on their students. Instead they reduce it to which materials would be best to enable the student to learn. Definitely going to read The Practice!
Still one of my favourite TF episodes of all time - it has so much gold nuggets about how to learn effectively. And maybe more meaningfully covering why the things that we truly desire (not the ones we say we do) are all learnable skills. Huge thanks to both Seth and Tim for this 🙏
I really like what Seth says about bad writing. Writing is basically like shooting hoops or lifting weights. The progress comes naturally if you put in the sweat during the process.
Two greats here - the practice is what gives us the ability to bring a consistency that others can depend on or be inspired by. It is cool that Seth is on the way to 20 books, and does bring a relaxed nature to his presentation at all times. Giving soft skills credit is a nice element of his, such that it puts more in our hands, and gives soft skills the compliment they don't normally get. Thanks for your continuing efforts, Tim and Seth.
How do you come up with a unique and different concepts for your podcast sessions usually? It's mind-boggling TBH. No one's as good as you when I search online.
When I think of what Seth is talking about as "magic" I think of Torvill & Dean. Bolero from 1984 Olympics Ice Dancing. I was holding my breath in awe... my mind saying it can't be this beautiful. What is your moment of magic in your life. Let's share. Post below!!
Just do it is also a traditional Zen teaching. Misattributing to a serial killer is good for a laugh but basically inaccurate.... not sure why I'm defending Nike but it just bugged me :P
They are already confused. If they hit 50, they'll have to add meat to their diets (and accept the omnivorous nature of their ancestors and peers). Eventually.
@@codehere142 I'm young and don't have much professional experience. Find people who've done what you're looking to do and study their life. Then if you want one of those people to mentor you, they will only respond if you're already putting in the work and you're actually of service to other people. Trust me, help yourself and then people will want to help you. Fail fast and fail often, but learn from each "failure" and take notes along the way. You know what it is you need to do, just do it merely!
@@just_in1375 That makes no sense, people listen to 3 hours of JRE a couple times per week and he talks with highly intellectual individuals on a regular basis.