00:00:00
Transcriber: Gustavo Rocha
Reviewer: Marssi Draw
00:00:09
Hi everyone.
00:00:11
Two year ago, my life changed forever.
00:00:16
My wife Kelsey and I
00:00:19
welcomed our daughter Lela
into the world.
00:00:23
Now, becoming a parent
is an amazing experience.
00:00:27
Your whole world changes over night.
00:00:30
And all of your priorities
change immediately.
00:00:33
So fast that it makes it really difficult
to process sometimes.
00:00:39
Now, you also have to learn
a tremendous amount about being a parent
00:00:43
like, for example,
how to dress your child.
00:00:46
(Laughter)
00:00:47
This was new to me.
00:00:50
This is an actual outfit,
I thought this was a good idea.
00:00:53
And even Lela knows
that it's not a good idea. (Laughter)
00:00:59
So there is so much to learn and
so much craziness all at once.
00:01:04
And to add to the craziness,
Kelsey and I both work from home,
00:01:08
we're entrepreneurs,
we run our own businesses.
00:01:11
So, Kelsey develops courses
online for yoga teachers.
00:01:16
I'm an author.
00:01:18
And so, I'm working from home,
Kelsey's working from home.
00:01:20
We have an infant
and we're trying to make sure
00:01:23
that everything gets done
that needs done.
00:01:26
And life is really, really busy.
00:01:32
And a couple of weeks
into this amazing experience,
00:01:36
when the sleep deprivation
really kicked in,
00:01:40
like around week eight,
00:01:42
I had this thought,
and it was the same thought
00:01:45
that parents across the ages,
internationally,
00:01:49
everybody has had this thought,
which is:
00:01:52
I am never going to have
free time ever again.
00:01:58
(Laughter)
00:01:59
Somebody said it's true.
00:02:02
It's not exactly true,
00:02:05
but it feels really, really true
in that moment.
00:02:09
And this was really
disconcerning to me,
00:02:12
because one of the things that I enjoy
00:02:15
more than anything else
is learning new things.
00:02:19
Getting curious about something
and diving in
00:02:22
and fiddling around and
learning through trial and error.
00:02:25
And eventually becoming pretty good
at something.
00:02:28
And without this free time,
00:02:32
I didn't know how I was ever
going to do that ever again.
00:02:36
And so, I'm a big geek,
00:02:38
I want to keep learning things,
I want to keep growing.
00:02:42
And so what I've decided to do was,
00:02:45
go to the library,
and go to the bookstore,
00:02:47
and look at what research says about
00:02:49
how we learn and how we learn quickly.
00:02:53
And I read a bunch of books,
I read a bunch of websites.
00:02:56
And tried to answer this question,
00:02:59
how long does it take
to acquire a new skill?
00:03:03
You know what I found?
00:03:05
10,000 hours!
00:03:09
Anybody ever heard this?
00:03:11
It takes 10,000 hours.
If you want to learn something new,
00:03:14
if you want to be good at it,
00:03:15
it's going to take 10,000 hours
to get there.
00:03:17
And I read this in book after book,
in website after website.
00:03:21
And my mental experience
of reading all of this stuff was like:
00:03:28
No!!
00:03:30
I don't have time!
I don't have 10,000 hours.
00:03:34
I am never going to be able
to learn anything new.
00:03:39
Ever again.
(Laughter)
00:03:42
But that's not true.
00:03:43
So, 10,000 hours, just to give you
a rough order of magnitude,
00:03:46
10,000 hours is a full-time job
for five years.
00:03:52
That's a long time.
00:03:54
And we've all had the experience
of learning something new,
00:03:56
and it didn't take us anywhere
close to that amount of time, right?
00:04:00
So, what's up? There's something
kinda funky going on here.
00:04:03
What the research says and what we expect,
and have experiences,
00:04:07
they don't match up.
00:04:09
And what I found, here's the wrinkle:
00:04:12
The 10,000 hour rule came out of studies
of expert-level performance.
00:04:19
There's a professor
at Florida State University,
00:04:22
his name is K. Anders Ericsson.
00:04:24
He is the originator
of the 10,00 hour rule.
00:04:26
And where that came from is,
he studied professional athletes,
00:04:31
world class musicians,
chess grand masters.
00:04:35
All of this ultra competitive folks
in ultra-high performing fields.
00:04:40
And he tried to figure out
how long does it take
00:04:43
to get to the top
of those kinds of fields.
00:04:46
And what he found is,
the more deliberate practice,
00:04:49
the more time
that those individuals spend
00:04:52
practicing the elements
of whatever it is that they do,
00:04:55
the more time you spend,
the better you get.
00:04:57
And the folks at the tippy top
of their fields
00:05:00
put in around 10,000 hours of practice.
00:05:05
Now, we were talking about the game
of telephone a little bit earlier.
00:05:09
Here's what happened:
00:05:11
an author by the name
of Malcolm Gladwell
00:05:13
wrote a book in 2007 called
"Outliers: The Story of Success",
00:05:17
and the central piece of that book
was the 10,000 hour rule.
00:05:21
Practice a lot, practice well,
and you will do extremely well,
00:05:25
you will reach the top of your field.
00:05:27
So, the message,
00:05:29
what Dr. Ericsson was actually saying is,
00:05:32
it takes 10,000 hours to get
at the top of an ultra competitive field
00:05:37
in a very narrow subject,
that's what that means.
00:05:41
But here's what happened:
ever since Outliers came out,
00:05:45
immediately came out,
reached the top of best seller lists,
00:05:47
stayed there for three solid months.
00:05:50
All of a sudden the 10,000 hour rule
was everywhere.
00:05:54
And a society-wide game of telephone
started to be played.
00:06:00
So this message, it takes 10,000 hours
to reach the top of an ultra competitive field,
00:06:04
became, it takes 10,000 hours
to become an expert at something,
00:06:09
which became,
00:06:11
it takes 10,000 hours to become
good at something,
00:06:15
which became,
00:06:17
it takes 10,000 hours
to learn something.
00:06:21
But that last statement,
it takes 10,000 hours to learn something,
00:06:25
is not true.
It's not true.
00:06:28
So, what the research actually says --
00:06:33
I spent a lot of time here
at the CSU library
00:06:36
in the cognitive psychology stacks
'cause I'm a geek.
00:06:39
And when you actually look
at the studies of skill acquisition,
00:06:44
you see over and over
a graph like this.
00:06:48
Now, researchers,
whether they're studying a motor skill,
00:06:51
something you do physically
or a mental skill,
00:06:54
they like to study things
that they can time.
00:06:57
'Cause you can quantify that, right?
00:06:59
So, they'll give research participants
a little task,
00:07:02
something that requires
physical arrangement,
00:07:04
or something that requires
learning a little mental trick,
00:07:08
and they'll time how long a participant
takes to complete the skill.
00:07:13
And here's what this graph says,
when you start --
00:07:16
so when researchers gave participants
a task, it took them a really long time,
00:07:20
'cause it was new
and they were horrible.
00:07:23
With a little bit of practice,
they get better and better and better.
00:07:26
And that early part of practice
is really, really efficient.
00:07:30
People get good at things
with just a little bit of practice.
00:07:36
Now, what's interesting to note is that,
00:07:39
for skills that we want to learn
for ourselves,
00:07:42
we don't care so much about time,
right?
00:07:45
We just care about how good we are,
whatever good happens to mean.
00:07:49
So if we relabel performance time
to how good you are,
00:07:54
the graph flips, and you get
his famous and widely known,
00:07:59
this is the learning curve.
00:08:01
And the story of the learning curve
is when you start,
00:08:03
you're grossly incompetent
and you know it, right?
00:08:06
(Laughter)
00:08:08
With a little bit of practice,
you get really good, really quick.
00:08:11
So that early level of improvement
is really fast.
00:08:15
And then at a certain point
you reach a plateau,
00:08:18
and the subsequent games
become much harder to get,
00:08:21
they take more time to get.
00:08:24
Now, my question is,
I want that, right?
00:08:28
How long does it take
from starting something
00:08:31
and being grossly incompetent
and knowing it
00:08:35
to being reasonably good?
00:08:37
In hopefully, as short a period of time
as possible.
00:08:42
So, how long does that take?
00:08:44
Here's what my research says: 20 hours.
00:08:49
That's it.
You can go from knowing nothing
00:08:53
about any skill that you can think of.
00:08:55
Want to learn a language?
Want to learn how to draw?
00:08:59
Want to learn how to juggle
flaming chainsaws?
00:09:02
(Laughter)
00:09:03
If you put 20 hours of focused
deliberate practice into that thing,
00:09:08
you will be astounded.
00:09:10
Astounded at how good you are.
00:09:14
20 hours is doable,
00:09:15
that's about 45 minutes a day
for about a month.
00:09:19
Even skipping a couple days,
here and there.
00:09:22
20 hours isn't that hard to accumulate.
00:09:25
Now, there's a method to doing this.
00:09:28
Because it's not like you can just start
fiddling around for about 20 hours
00:09:31
and expect these massive improvements.
00:09:33
There's a way to practice intelligently.
00:09:35
There's a way to practice efficiently,
00:09:37
that will make sure that you invest
those 20 hours
00:09:41
in the most effective way
that you possibly can.
00:09:43
And here's the method,
it applies to anything:
00:09:47
The first is to deconstruct the skill.
00:09:51
Decide exactly what you want
to be able to do when you're done,
00:09:56
and then look into the skill
and break it down into smaller pieces.
00:10:02
Most of the things
that we think of as skills
00:10:06
are actually big bundles of skills
that require all sorts of different things.
00:10:10
The more you can break apart the skill,
00:10:14
the more you're able to decide,
00:10:16
what are the parts of this skill
that would actually help me
00:10:18
get to what I want?
00:10:21
And then you can practice those first.
00:10:23
And if you practice
the most important things first,
00:10:25
you'll be able to improve
your performance
00:10:28
in the least amount of time possible.
00:10:31
The second is, learn enough
to self correct.
00:10:34
So, get three to five resources
about what it is you're trying to learn.
00:10:38
Could be book, could be DVDs,
could be courses, could be anything.
00:10:43
But don't use those as a way
to procrastinate on practice.
00:10:48
I know I do this, right?
00:10:50
Get like 20 books about the topic,
like,
00:10:52
"I'm going to start learning
how to program a computer
00:10:55
when I complete these 20 books".
00:10:57
No. That's procrastination.
00:11:00
What you want to do
is learn just enough
00:11:04
that you can actually practice
00:11:05
and self correct or self edit
as you practice.
00:11:10
So the learning becomes
a way of getting better
00:11:13
at noticing
when you're making a mistake
00:11:16
and then doing something
a little different.
00:11:19
The third is to remove barriers
to practice.
00:11:24
Distractions, television, internet.
00:11:26
All of these things
that get in the way
00:11:29
of you actually sitting down
and doing the work.
00:11:33
And the more you're able to use
just a little bit of willpower
00:11:36
to remove the distractions that
are keeping you from practicing,
00:11:39
the more likely you are to actually
sit down and practice, right?
00:11:46
And the fourth is to practice
for at least 20 hours.
00:11:51
Now, most skills have what I call
a frustration barrier.
00:11:54
You know, the grossly-incompetent-
and-knowing-it part?
00:11:58
That's really, really frustrating.
We don't like to feel stupid.
00:12:02
And feeling stupid is a barrier to us
actually sitting down and doing the work.
00:12:07
So, by pre-committing to practicing
whatever it is that you want to do
00:12:11
for at least 20 hours,
00:12:14
you will be able to overcome
that initial frustration barrier
00:12:18
and stick with the practice long enough
to actually reap the rewards.
00:12:23
That's it! It's not rocket science.
00:12:25
Four very simple steps that
you can use to learn anything.
00:12:31
Now, this is easy to talk
about in theory,
00:12:35
but it's more fun to talk about
in practice.
00:12:37
So one of the things that I've wanted
to learn how to do for a long time
00:12:41
is play the ukulele.
00:12:44
Has anybody seen
Jake Shimabukuro's TEDTalk
00:12:47
where he plays the ukulele
and makes it sound like --
00:12:50
he's like a ukulele god.
00:12:52
It's amazing.
00:12:54
I saw it, I was like,
"That is so cool!"
00:12:57
It's such a neat instrument.
I would really like to learn how to play.
00:13:01
And so I decided
that to test this theory
00:13:03
I wanted to put 20 hours
into practicing ukulele
00:13:07
and see where it got.
00:13:09
And so the first thing
about playing the ukulele is,
00:13:13
in order to practice,
you have to have one, right?
00:13:17
So, I got an ukulele and
-- My lovely assistant?
00:13:21
(Laughter)
00:13:24
Thank you sir.
I think I need the chord here.
00:13:31
It's not just an ukulele,
it's an electric ukulele. (Laughter)
00:13:35
Yeah.
00:13:40
So, the first couple hours are just
like the first couple hours of anything.
00:13:45
You have to get the tools
that you are using to practice.
00:13:48
You have to make sure
they're available.
00:13:50
My ukulele didn't come
with strings attached.
00:13:52
I had to figure out
how to put those on.
00:13:54
Like, that's kind of important, right?
00:13:56
And learning how to tune,
learning how to make sure
00:13:58
that all of the things
that need to be done
00:14:00
in order to start practicing
get done, right?
00:14:04
Now, one of the things when I was
ready to actually start practicing
00:14:11
was I looked in online databases
and songbooks for how to play songs.
00:14:15
And they say, okay, ukuleles, you can
play more than one string at a time,
00:14:19
so you can play chords, that's cool,
00:14:20
you are accompanying yourself,
yay you. (Laughter)
00:14:24
And when I started looking at songs,
00:14:28
I had an ukulele chord book
that had like hundreds of chords.
00:14:32
Looking at this and
"Wow, that's intimidating".
00:14:35
But when you look at the actual songs,
00:14:37
you see the same chords
over and over, right?
00:14:42
As it turns out, playing the ukulele
is kind of like doing anything,
00:14:46
There's a very small set of things
that are really important
00:14:49
and techniques that you'll use
all the time.
00:14:52
And in most songs
you'll use four, maybe five chords,
00:14:58
and that's it, that's the song.
00:15:00
You don't have to know hundreds,
as long as you know the four or the five.
00:15:04
So, while I was doing my research,
00:15:06
I found a wonderful little medley
of pop songs
00:15:11
by a band called Axis of Awesome.
(Whistles)
00:15:16
-- Somebody knows it. --
00:15:19
And what Axis of Awesome says
is that you can learn,
00:15:23
or you can play pretty much
any pop song of the past five decades,
00:15:27
if you know four chords,
00:15:28
and those chords are G, D, Em and C.
00:15:33
Four chords pump out
every pop song ever, right?
00:15:37
So I thought, this is cool!
00:15:39
I would like to play
every pop song ever. (Laughter)
00:15:42
So, that was the first song
I decided to learn,
00:15:45
and I would like to actually
share it with you. Ready?
00:15:49
(Applause)
Alright.
00:15:51
(Music)
00:16:03
(Singing)
Just a small town girl,
00:16:06
living in a lonely world,
00:16:08
she took the midnight train
going anywhere.
00:16:14
I heard that you settled down,
(Laughter)
00:16:18
that you found a girl,
00:16:21
that you're married now.
00:16:25
Every night in my dreams
(Laughter)
00:16:27
I see you, I feel you,
00:16:30
that is how I know you go on.
(Laughter)
00:16:36
I won't hesitate no more, no more.
It cannot wait, I'm yours.
00:16:42
'Cause you were amazing,
we did amazing things.
00:16:47
If I could, then I would,
I'd go wherever you will --
00:16:52
Can you feel the love tonight.
(Laughter)
00:16:58
I can't live with or without you.
00:17:03
When I find myself --
00:17:05
When I find myself in times of trouble,
mother Mary comes to me,
00:17:07
Sometimes I feel like I don't have partner.
No woman, no cry.
00:17:11
Yeah mama, this surely is a dream.
00:17:13
I come from a land down under.
(Laughter)
00:17:15
Once a jolly swagman
camped by a billabong.
00:17:18
Hey, I just met you, and this is crazy,
(Laughter)
00:17:22
but here's my number, so call me
00:17:26
Hey sexy lady, op, op, op, op,
oppan gangnam style. (Laughter)
00:17:30
It's time to say goodbye.
00:17:35
Closing time, every new beginning
comes from some other beginning's end.
00:17:45
(Singing and music ends)
(Applause)
00:17:56
Thank you, thank you.
00:18:03
I love that song.
(Laughter)
00:18:07
And I have a secret to share with you.
00:18:10
So, by playing that song for you,
00:18:14
I just hit my twentieth hour
of practicing the ukulele.
00:18:19
(Applause)
Thank you.
00:18:24
And so it's amazing, pretty much
anything that you can think of,
00:18:28
what do you want to do.
00:18:30
The major barrier to learn
something new is not intellectual,
00:18:35
it's not the process of you learning
a bunch of little tips or tricks or things.
00:18:40
The major barrier's emotional.
We're scared.
00:18:44
Feeling stupid doesn't feel good,
00:18:47
in the beginning of learning
anything new
00:18:49
you feel really stupid.
00:18:51
So the major barrier's not intellectual,
it's emotional.
00:18:55
But put 20 hours into anything.
00:18:58
It doesn't matter.
What do you want to learn?
00:19:01
Do you want to learn a language?
Want to learn how to cook?
00:19:04
Want to learn how to draw?
00:19:07
What turns you on?
What lights you up?
00:19:10
Go out and do that thing.
It only takes 20 hours.
00:19:14
Have fun.
00:19:16
(Applause)