Lessons On Improvement for Change!
Editorials News | Jan-02-2020
First, doing a light amount of work is a great way to reduce the pain of difficult sessions. Imagine that you do an easy 1-minute push up workout on Monday and a difficult 10-minute pushup session on Friday. The Repeated Bout Effect says that your soreness after Friday's workout will be reduced as you did an easy session earlier in the week. Easy work can make a difference.
Second, the amount of work that you need to do to reach your maximum level of output is higher than what you are doing now. Unless you are already performing at 100 percent of your potential, you have room to grow. And the Repeated Bout Effect tells us that you have probably acquired all of the normal stimuli in your life. If you want to reach a new level of success then you need to put in a new level of work. This does not mean you should start by doing as much work as possible, but it does mean that when you start small you can't expect one small change to work forever. You have to continually graduate to the next level.
Third, deliberate practice is critical to long-term success. Doing the same type of work over and over again is a strange form of laziness. You cannot go to the gym or run the same three miles per week, and expect to enjoy ever-improving results. After a few months of repetitive workouts, you’ve seen all the results that three-mile runs can deliver and your body has adapted to that stimulus. This is why deliberately practicing new skills that you can master in one to three practice sessions is important for long-term improvement. Making deliberate practice a habit can help you avoid carelessly practicing things that no longer deliver any benefit. The key takeaway here is that things will work for a little while and then we will get used to them.
“What you got here won’t get you there.” Doing the same thing over and over again, even if it worked for a long time, will eventually lead to a plateau. If nothing changes, nothing is going to change Said Marshall Goldsmith in his best-selling book.
By: Saksham Gupta
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