00:00:01
so we have a lot of information in our
00:00:04
heads and trying to sound smart about
00:00:08
that information is quite frankly a
00:00:11
disease if you dare to speak greatly
00:00:14
dare to be dull with your speech and I
00:00:18
want to show you in today's video how if
00:00:20
you can be curious honest and humble in
00:00:23
your speaking you will be unstoppable I
00:00:26
want to share with you the seven-step
00:00:29
journey
00:00:30
that has allowed me to fundamentally
00:00:33
find the opinions in my mind on certain
00:00:37
topics take those opinions and refine
00:00:39
them into something that is articulate
00:00:41
and structured and I want to give you in
00:00:44
this video three resources that will
00:00:45
help you bulletproof you're speaking in
00:00:48
this way so the first thing that I want
00:00:50
to address is give you a 30,000 foot
00:00:52
overview of what we are trying to
00:00:55
achieve when we share our opinion on a
00:00:57
topic there are three things the first
00:00:59
is we want to share what is buried
00:01:01
inside our mind not some artificial
00:01:04
opinion from others what is
00:01:07
uniquely ours the second thing is we
00:01:10
want to choose the right words to
00:01:14
capture our
00:01:15
idea and the third is that we desire
00:01:17
Clarity our opinion needs to make sense
00:01:19
it should not be unnecessarily Tangled
00:01:22
or complex now here's the problem most
00:01:26
of society lacks these three qualities
00:01:27
in their speaking the opinions that most
00:01:30
people share are poorly worded they're
00:01:32
plagiarized they're adopted from others
00:01:34
or they're just plain unclear and this
00:01:36
often leads to speech that sounds
00:01:39
unsatisfying what do we mean by
00:01:41
unsatisfying well it does not fulfill us
00:01:44
when we say it we feel as if we didn't
00:01:46
fully
00:01:48
articulate what we're holding in our
00:01:52
minds there's a communication itch
00:01:54
that's just not being scratched and you
00:01:56
can alleviate that discomfort by
00:01:58
understanding a few few simple things
00:02:00
about how our minds and mouths
00:02:02
collaborate when we communicate so the
00:02:06
first thing I want to address
00:02:08
is understanding how to find what is
00:02:11
inside your mind so imagine your
00:02:14
knowledge on a topic as a small circle
00:02:17
you've got thousands of these circles in
00:02:19
your mind then the younger you are the
00:02:21
smaller the circles are inside each
00:02:22
circle is everything you know about a
00:02:25
particular subject outside the circle is
00:02:27
everything you don't know as you acquire
00:02:31
more experience as you mature that line
00:02:34
expands to include more information
00:02:37
what's usually in any one of our circles
00:02:38
in a given moment is a makeshift opinion
00:02:42
composed of half-remembered
00:02:44
anecdotes shocking statistics and sound
00:02:48
bites from social media think about what
00:02:50
most people say in conversation yeah I
00:02:52
read recently a study about that person
00:02:55
oh I saw that person is not good from
00:02:56
the economy and they're quoting some
00:02:59
article or social media Source this is
00:03:01
most people and there's nothing
00:03:02
particularly wrong with that however
00:03:05
most people never find the right words
00:03:07
to express what they think they simply
00:03:09
choose the words most accessible to them
00:03:13
which is usually the last thing that
00:03:15
they heard and this is one of my
00:03:18
internal beefs that I have with social
00:03:20
media culture is that it often results
00:03:22
in people being made up mostly of
00:03:25
quotations and this speaks to one of the
00:03:28
fundamental biases that we have as
00:03:29
humans is our mind has a bias for
00:03:31
recency and repetition we repeat what we
00:03:35
hear the most or what we heard most
00:03:39
recently and this often causes us to
00:03:42
ignore our deep truths it causes us to
00:03:45
ignore the perspectives that are unique
00:03:47
to us the things that would satisfy us
00:03:50
if we were able to excavate those and
00:03:52
articulate them in conversation so this
00:03:55
invites the question the question
00:03:58
becomes how can we know what we know in
00:04:02
other words is it possible to accelerate
00:04:04
our understanding on something so that
00:04:06
we can figure
00:04:08
out the Bedrock of our thought or our
00:04:13
opinion and if we use that word Bedrock
00:04:16
that concept it implies that there is
00:04:19
something above it there is something
00:04:21
preventing access to what we can assume
00:04:26
is the that rich content of our opinion
00:04:29
which is true I mean the gold we are
00:04:30
after is not within easy reach for a
00:04:33
good reason most people do not engage in
00:04:36
thinking and attempting to articulate
00:04:38
that thinking with speaking because it
00:04:40
is a hard process there are layers of
00:04:42
questioning and thinking and really
00:04:47
understanding that needs to happen for
00:04:48
us to be able to engage those deeper
00:04:50
parts of what we really
00:04:54
think and really engage those deeper
00:04:57
parts of these circles because these
00:05:00
circles really are more in the shape of
00:05:02
cones when viewed from the side most of
00:05:04
us simply comment off the top we skim
00:05:07
the most recent information that has
00:05:09
been added to this pile and what we
00:05:12
really want to do is excavate That Base
00:05:17
that Bedrock that incorporates
00:05:18
everything that has been set upon it
00:05:20
that's what would give us a satisfying
00:05:22
answer right it's a rhetorical question
00:05:25
because I want to suggest why that is
00:05:28
not the right way to think about it in
00:05:30
just a moment however there is something
00:05:32
to be said about if we have not spent
00:05:36
time articulating our thoughts or
00:05:38
writing about them or speaking about
00:05:40
them in conversation this cone is going
00:05:43
to be a complete mystery to us in fact
00:05:44
we don't even know what its shape is
00:05:47
however the funny thing is about
00:05:49
articulating our opinion is that even
00:05:51
though we don't know what's beneath
00:05:54
those those superficial layers those
00:05:57
cheap anecdotes and sta statistics that
00:06:00
we just like to list off like it's some
00:06:03
kind of verbal script we do
00:06:06
know what our opinion is if we were
00:06:09
given options if options were presented
00:06:12
to us for
00:06:16
example if I ask you you to describe
00:06:18
your best
00:06:19
friend you might
00:06:22
start with some obvious description by
00:06:24
saying oh he or she is nice and you
00:06:28
might then start combing through
00:06:30
different
00:06:30
qualities General adjectives describing
00:06:34
other people you know they're nice
00:06:36
they're friendly they're outgoing now
00:06:38
you also know that if I were to put all
00:06:39
those options out on the table in front
00:06:41
of you different qualities of people you
00:06:44
would be able to clearly confirm or
00:06:47
deny if those apply to your friend oh my
00:06:50
friend he's definitely nice he's kind
00:06:52
but he's not loyal and the same is true
00:06:54
with our opinions or beliefs what do you
00:06:57
believe about politics well if I were to
00:06:59
ask you that question you probably would
00:07:01
struggle to give me a straight answer
00:07:03
though if I were to present all of these
00:07:06
options to you on the table in front of
00:07:08
you you would be able to figure out what
00:07:11
your political opinion is or isn't and
00:07:13
you can come to those conclusions by
00:07:15
seeing everything on the table in front
00:07:17
of you the quantity of information and
00:07:20
slowly by saying yes no yes no things
00:07:23
are beginning to take shape so it's
00:07:26
almost as if when we think about this
00:07:29
the problem of finding our opinion feels
00:07:32
like it's one of not knowing what all of
00:07:34
our options are and that's kind of
00:07:36
frustrating because we feel convinced
00:07:40
that only by seeing everything before us
00:07:43
can we fully develop and articulate our
00:07:47
opinion now the inherent limitation in
00:07:49
this thinking of course is that we only
00:07:51
have access to what our mind allows us
00:07:53
to remember in the moment which is
00:07:55
usually whatever comes to mind within
00:07:57
about 10 seconds if even we have that
00:07:59
long
00:08:00
to think about one thought so this
00:08:03
process it can feel like pulling teeth
00:08:07
because we understand that we don't have
00:08:09
this ability to see everything before us
00:08:12
on what we want to articulate on a topic
00:08:14
but this is a good process it's good
00:08:17
because we're we're getting closer to
00:08:19
figuring out what we think because we're
00:08:23
interpreting these yes and no
00:08:27
conclusions through some kind of a
00:08:29
filter because remember everything that
00:08:31
we say yes or no to is because it is
00:08:33
being held against some standard what is
00:08:35
that standard what do I mean by that
00:08:37
well that standard is what is called
00:08:41
your value prism and this is the first
00:08:44
major concept that I want to introduce
00:08:45
you to because whether you realize it or
00:08:47
not every single one of us is refracting
00:08:49
the world through a set of internal
00:08:51
values what are those values well they
00:08:54
can be things like gratitude Compassion
00:08:57
or respect here's the full list if
00:08:59
you're interested where do those values
00:09:01
come from well they come from your
00:09:02
upbringing your parents your culture
00:09:05
your religion it's what makes those
00:09:08
options on the table feel right to you
00:09:11
now it doesn't mean that your values are
00:09:13
right but that's a conversation for
00:09:15
another time what is important to
00:09:17
understand is that when something does
00:09:19
not align with your values when your
00:09:21
opinion does not align with your
00:09:23
values it feels insincere it feels
00:09:26
unsatisfying and it often feels
00:09:28
artificial it can sound right the words
00:09:30
can be beautifully arranged into an
00:09:32
eloquent sentence but it doesn't feel
00:09:35
right and the problem is the vast
00:09:37
majority of people in society
00:09:39
particularly the younger generations and
00:09:41
those that I've had in my network and
00:09:45
have the honor of speaking to they don't
00:09:48
lead with any values most people don't
00:09:51
even know what their values are and I've
00:09:53
realize that this has led to a lot
00:09:56
of neurotic thinking in Society where
00:10:00
I've noticed people going from one
00:10:02
well-worded opinion to another from one
00:10:04
inspirational quote that they're pulling
00:10:06
from an Instagram motivational page to
00:10:09
another because it sounds appealing it's
00:10:12
once again deliciously worded but it's
00:10:15
not them when they say it it's not them
00:10:19
and they can feel it and other people
00:10:22
can feel it and here lies one of the
00:10:24
biggest misconceptions about approaching
00:10:27
your
00:10:28
opinion on on a topic is we think that
00:10:32
satisfaction often comes
00:10:35
from quantity and when I say Quantity I
00:10:38
mean that idea we discussed earlier of
00:10:41
oh if only I could see everything before
00:10:44
us I'd be able to share everything that
00:10:46
I believe on this topic and only then
00:10:47
would I be satisfied or the second thing
00:10:51
we think would satisfy us is a false
00:10:54
quality and what I mean by a false
00:10:56
quality is this idea of articulating
00:10:59
someone else's beautiful words that seem
00:11:02
to capture what we think and only if we
00:11:04
can say it in the best way will it
00:11:07
satisfy us it's a false quality what we
00:11:10
want is a true quality and what a true
00:11:12
quality is is something that stems from
00:11:15
our
00:11:16
values that is filtered through our
00:11:19
value prism it's not an answer of
00:11:21
quantity it's an answer of quality and
00:11:24
so the action item here the action item
00:11:27
you need to pick some values you need to
00:11:29
find out what you stand for and here's a
00:11:33
list that I'll link below this video in
00:11:34
case you're interested here's what my
00:11:36
value prism looks like now I'm not here
00:11:38
to assign you any particular bouquet of
00:11:42
values however I would offer up to you a
00:11:44
few that I think Society is rapidly
00:11:46
losing that would be excellent starting
00:11:48
points the first one is honesty I'm
00:11:52
convinced that most people say what they
00:11:54
think others want to hear not what they
00:11:58
themselves belief the challenge with
00:12:00
this is when you withhold information
00:12:02
when you withhold something in your mind
00:12:04
what you've done is you've created a a
00:12:06
second thread here's what you want to
00:12:09
say or here's what you're saying and
00:12:12
then here's what you believe and the
00:12:14
problem with that is that it takes you
00:12:15
out of the present moment and it brings
00:12:17
you unhappiness and and unsatisfaction
00:12:19
in your speech so valuing honesty and
00:12:22
using that as a filter in your value
00:12:25
prism is a strong suggestion and one
00:12:27
that will bring you a lot of
00:12:28
satisfaction the second value is
00:12:31
Simplicity I think there's a lot of
00:12:33
people today in society who just like to
00:12:36
have a degree in in yapping they like to
00:12:38
talk a lot I'm guilty of this as well
00:12:41
and they make things sound unnecessarily
00:12:43
long in complex I'm always reminded by
00:12:47
that famous quote an idiot admires
00:12:50
complexity a genius admires Simplicity
00:12:53
we'll talk about how you can be more
00:12:54
simple in your speaking later in this
00:12:56
video the third quality
00:12:59
where value is experience I think we
00:13:02
have a lot of people in society once
00:13:03
again among the generations gen Z My
00:13:05
Generation where there are many people
00:13:07
who are simply adopting conclusions from
00:13:10
this brain pack of society from social
00:13:12
media only because they are worded well
00:13:16
and we regurgitate these sound bites not
00:13:19
because
00:13:20
they are meaningful to us but because
00:13:24
they sound right now of course they
00:13:26
don't mean much because that person
00:13:28
didn't step through any of the
00:13:30
experience that led to that sound bite
00:13:31
that led to that conclusion and so
00:13:33
saying those sound bites in conversation
00:13:37
are largely going to feel empty and void
00:13:40
of meaning because they fundamentally
00:13:41
didn't stem from your experience and I
00:13:44
think speaking from experience is so
00:13:47
undervalued in society today
00:13:51
and none of this is helped by the fact
00:13:53
that I think people are getting less and
00:13:55
less experience they are doing less and
00:13:57
less things because they have more more
00:13:59
and more reasons to keep them tethered
00:14:01
and entertained where they
00:14:04
are
00:14:05
so I'll put a book end to that thought
00:14:09
and take a step back and say that these
00:14:11
three values or these values from these
00:14:14
lists are things that we should be
00:14:16
verbally working into the way that we
00:14:18
speak how do we do this well we can
00:14:20
simply say things like I value
00:14:22
Simplicity and that is a reminder to us
00:14:25
that we are going to try to speak simply
00:14:27
you can be a little bit more delicate
00:14:29
with how you word it you could say well
00:14:31
speaking from experience on this and
00:14:34
that introduces you to that value of
00:14:35
experience what do I honestly think
00:14:38
about this that introduces honesty and
00:14:41
it encourages you to begin activating
00:14:45
that value in the way that you
00:14:48
speak there are some other ways that you
00:14:51
can word this that I'll link below these
00:14:53
actually stem from interviews of 1%
00:14:56
communicators that I've studied and
00:14:59
written down the way that they
00:15:01
articulate these values this isn't some
00:15:04
crackhead idea that I'm coming up with
00:15:06
spontaneously this is something that
00:15:08
I've noticed undergirds the most
00:15:11
powerful and persuasive forms of
00:15:12
communication what this does is it gives
00:15:15
us an angle for our speaking that
00:15:17
immediately begins aligning with what we
00:15:19
value and that produces a satisfying
00:15:22
answer I've noticed that there is a
00:15:24
direct relationship with how satisfied
00:15:26
you feel with your words and how you are
00:15:30
with yourself and that begins by
00:15:32
defining your value prism the value
00:15:34
prism is that Launchpad that gives you
00:15:37
the initial momentum that you need to
00:15:39
find and articulate your
00:15:41
opinion well if you thought that was
00:15:43
hard now comes the most challenging part
00:15:44
this is also a fun part because I like
00:15:47
language and Linguistics and this is
00:15:50
this was a large Epiphany moment for me
00:15:53
understanding this that is the challenge
00:15:54
of capturing our mind's contents with
00:15:57
words here's the problem with that
00:15:59
thinking there are no right
00:16:01
words what we often mean by the right
00:16:05
words are words that uniquely qualify
00:16:07
our opinion as our own or describe it at
00:16:11
a
00:16:12
precise granular level now people often
00:16:16
think this is where big words come into
00:16:18
play expanding our vocabulary expanding
00:16:21
our vocabulary does help in fact it was
00:16:24
lewood Van wienstein who has a quote he
00:16:26
says the limits of our language are are
00:16:29
the limits of our world there is
00:16:30
something to be said about more words
00:16:33
giving you a better ability to perceive
00:16:36
and articulate the world around you in a
00:16:38
greater capacity however we have to
00:16:42
remember that we are never going to be
00:16:44
able to capture with language everything
00:16:47
that exists in our mind or every
00:16:49
experience that we have on a particular
00:16:52
thought why well because speech actually
00:16:55
is an incredibly low bandwidth mechanism
00:16:58
for communicating
00:16:59
the rich colorful
00:17:03
multi-dimensional language of the Mind
00:17:06
what Steven Pinker called mental Le
00:17:08
which is a combination of emotions
00:17:12
experience
00:17:14
and many other nuances that words just
00:17:19
won't capture it's like trying to
00:17:20
describe a multicolor painting with just
00:17:23
black and white you end up saying a lot
00:17:24
of things like well it's a really light
00:17:27
shade of white or that's
00:17:29
very deep gray like there's a disconnect
00:17:31
of course it's not going to accurately
00:17:33
depict what is the
00:17:37
real pallet of colors and that makes
00:17:42
sense because most of us feel at some
00:17:45
point that we are unsatisfied by what we
00:17:47
say and here's how one person on Reddit
00:17:50
brilliantly described it the brain moves
00:17:52
at the speed of thought mouth moves at
00:17:54
floppy meat speed floppy meat can't keep
00:17:57
up with zapping brain
00:17:59
Flappy meat sounds like dummy to sapping
00:18:02
brain when a thought stays in our mind
00:18:05
before we attempt to put it into words
00:18:07
our mind can very quickly create the
00:18:09
illusion of deep understanding we become
00:18:14
diluted into thinking that we have the
00:18:16
thought completely wrinkle-free it's
00:18:20
ironed out it's fully formed and then
00:18:23
when we attempt to put it into words or
00:18:25
when we attempt to speak from the base
00:18:27
of the cone most most of us realize that
00:18:29
gosh we have a huge whopping nothing
00:18:32
Burger this is why most people 75% of
00:18:35
people think they have an above average
00:18:37
intelligence and this often leads us to
00:18:39
overestimate our level of understanding
00:18:41
of things when we're forced to
00:18:43
articulate
00:18:45
it we realize that there is very little
00:18:48
substance to most of our thoughts and
00:18:51
this is because the mechanism of speech
00:18:53
just isn't fast enough to capture those
00:18:55
complex thoughts that we have on a topic
00:18:58
and to expect that we want to put a
00:19:01
brand new
00:19:02
thought that contains emotions
00:19:05
experiences associations memories all of
00:19:09
that arrange that into a brilliantly
00:19:12
articulated sentence on the first try is
00:19:15
absolutely absurb now we can capture
00:19:18
more of the mind's contents the more
00:19:19
that we output the more that we engage
00:19:21
in conversation in writing in recording
00:19:24
videos we'll talk about this later in
00:19:28
the this video however we need to
00:19:30
recognize that this process of
00:19:32
translating our 4D thoughts into what
00:19:35
really we can think of as 1D words is
00:19:38
going to require some compromise and
00:19:40
accepting that accepting that there is
00:19:42
going to be some
00:19:45
loss is one a burden that we just have
00:19:49
to bear but two is remarkably refreshing
00:19:54
because it's necessary for us to embrace
00:19:57
imperfection are
00:19:59
speaking and thinking that we have to
00:20:02
say everything in the right
00:20:04
words perfectly often leads to a lot of
00:20:08
intellectual paralysis where we say
00:20:10
nothing at all and many people don't say
00:20:12
anything not because they don't have
00:20:14
anything to say but because they think
00:20:17
it's only worth saying if they can say
00:20:18
it well and this leads us to the third
00:20:21
major
00:20:22
concept and that is understanding that
00:20:24
you will be more satisfied with what you
00:20:26
say the more you say it
00:20:29
in other words
00:20:30
output speaking writing engaging in
00:20:34
conversation forces Clarity and output
00:20:37
can be once again conversation it can be
00:20:39
talking to yourself aloud better yet
00:20:41
some form of writing Clarity is achieved
00:20:43
in the output the creation side of
00:20:45
things and this is one of these negative
00:20:48
trend lines that I've seen developing in
00:20:50
society where it is not through
00:20:53
consumption rarely is it achieved
00:20:55
through
00:20:57
input let me let me put this another way
00:20:59
it is highly unlikely that you will
00:21:01
achieve clear thinking and by virtue
00:21:03
clear speaking by watching social media
00:21:06
excessively including this video which
00:21:08
by the way none of this information is
00:21:09
going to preserve itself in your mind in
00:21:12
perfect Crystal Clarity unless you've
00:21:14
made an effort to talk about it to write
00:21:16
about it or to create your life or
00:21:19
conversations around it in some small
00:21:21
way and that's why one of these Rising
00:21:24
trend lines in in social media or
00:21:27
Internet culture is this aggressive
00:21:28
level of consumption of others opinions
00:21:31
we look to the comments to gain a
00:21:32
perspective before we even formulate our
00:21:34
own we let our phones run like a tap all
00:21:37
day long when we eat now you might say
00:21:40
but Joseph doesn't everyone do this yes
00:21:43
they do and I would poee to you the
00:21:45
counter question do you want the
00:21:47
thinking patterns of everyone else my
00:21:49
objective in creating this video is to
00:21:52
suggest what I think can lead to crisper
00:21:55
sharper thinking which by the way most
00:21:58
people don't have and in order to have
00:22:00
that well there's something to be said
00:22:02
about going against the habits of the
00:22:03
masses so one of the most obvious things
00:22:06
that I think most people can practice
00:22:09
more is getting their mind's inner
00:22:12
contents outside things are going to
00:22:15
remain loose foggy and
00:22:17
undefined in your mind until you are
00:22:20
forced to output and any of you who are
00:22:23
thinking that the ideas that I'm sharing
00:22:24
in this video have any amount of clarity
00:22:27
is only because I I've done thinking on
00:22:29
this in advance I'm not piecing all of
00:22:32
these ideas together in real time as if
00:22:35
I've got the perfect map to some newly
00:22:37
charted
00:22:39
territory and what I've realized in
00:22:41
training clients around the world and
00:22:43
teaching people to speak like they think
00:22:46
is that the most elite communicators
00:22:49
have learned that
00:22:51
output volume of output is what closes
00:22:55
the gap between foggy thinking and clear
00:22:57
speech you ever wonder why the speakers
00:23:00
the podcasters the leaders that you
00:23:02
listen to are able to achieve such
00:23:05
surgical Precision is because they have
00:23:08
engaged in output on those topics a
00:23:11
hundred times before
00:23:13
Clarity clear opinions is the outcome of
00:23:17
consistent thought I had to remember
00:23:19
what how I phrased that before one of
00:23:21
the easiest and most efficient ways that
00:23:22
you can do this and something that I
00:23:25
practice is Essence writing oh writing
00:23:27
I'm not a writer well listen tolken
00:23:29
neither am I but here's an exercise that
00:23:31
I've been able to develop for myself
00:23:34
that can allow you to achieve Clarity on
00:23:36
a topic without having to write a
00:23:37
fantasy novel every night so the idea is
00:23:39
you open up a document and every single
00:23:41
night you write for five minutes you
00:23:44
write your topics out usually one topic
00:23:47
you write your thoughts out and you do
00:23:51
this in sections you're going to do this
00:23:52
in fact in three stages the first is
00:23:54
you're going to write it out in 200
00:23:55
words you're going to write it out in
00:23:57
100 Words and and then you're going to
00:23:58
write it out in 50 words you can use a
00:24:00
word counter to track the word count
00:24:02
there's a Google template that I've
00:24:03
created for myself that you're welcome
00:24:05
to use below this video and here's a
00:24:07
sample of what I was writing yesterday
00:24:09
so you can see this in its three
00:24:10
different stages why is writing
00:24:13
important
00:24:15
because there are all kinds of gaps in
00:24:17
your
00:24:18
thinking and in your speaking where
00:24:20
you're making leaps where you don't
00:24:22
realize and when you're forced to write
00:24:24
it down and connect the sentences you
00:24:27
have to complete those gaps and make a
00:24:29
structure structured logical Chain of
00:24:32
Thought the benefit of all of this is
00:24:33
that the more you output the more you
00:24:36
begin making connections and finding
00:24:39
links between these different circles
00:24:43
these different cones the more
00:24:45
connections you make the stronger your
00:24:47
model of the world becomes and that's
00:24:50
what this is is a model of how you have
00:24:53
come to understand things now it doesn't
00:24:55
mean that you have it all correct that
00:24:57
you've populated these circles in some
00:25:01
objectively right way what it does mean
00:25:03
is that you understand the information
00:25:06
that you know and that you can
00:25:08
articulate it clearly and simply and
00:25:11
this is what most people don't
00:25:12
understand that the most valuable
00:25:14
currency in society today is
00:25:17
Clarity and a Clarity is is a Clarity
00:25:20
Clarity is often achieved with simple
00:25:22
words and simple sentences it's one of
00:25:24
the reasons why our culture has become
00:25:26
so obsessed with quotations over the
00:25:29
last decade because quotations do what
00:25:33
they capture a complex intricate
00:25:39
often chaotic idea into a simple
00:25:42
powerful sentence and it's like what
00:25:45
Reddit often does with the tldr everyone
00:25:47
wants the tldr at the end of the day and
00:25:50
my challenge to you actually is next
00:25:52
time that you hear someone say something
00:25:54
remarkably clear I want you to think to
00:25:56
yourself about how that person has spent
00:25:59
hundreds of hours thinking through that
00:26:01
idea in fact the clearer something is
00:26:03
the more valuable they often consider it
00:26:05
to be to share with us and this is why
00:26:07
Clarity is often a currency why I like
00:26:09
to say that because it is a measure of
00:26:11
how someone it is a measure of someone
00:26:14
else's thought time the the final
00:26:17
component that I think Society is
00:26:19
desperately
00:26:20
lacking is intellectual humility
00:26:23
humility is the most important component
00:26:25
in all of this because it says even
00:26:27
though I have all this together even
00:26:29
though I've got a model of the world and
00:26:30
I can access the different layers of
00:26:32
what's inside my information cones I
00:26:36
don't know at all there's still more
00:26:39
outside the
00:26:41
circles
00:26:44
and I think few very few people can say
00:26:47
that even though it's true with all of
00:26:50
us I think the most powerful person in
00:26:53
the room is the one who gives themselves
00:26:54
the freedom to say I don't know
00:26:58
and I think most people would rather
00:27:00
squeeze water from Stone than say those
00:27:04
words why is that
00:27:08
well I think the modern moral dictates
00:27:11
to us that we should have all of these
00:27:12
complex and complete answers partly
00:27:15
because we see those coming from a lot
00:27:16
of people that we consume people who are
00:27:20
full-time speakers and thinkers and have
00:27:22
teams writers behind them giving them
00:27:24
the best answers for everything and we
00:27:27
live in this Society where
00:27:29
unfortunately people are rewarded for
00:27:30
what they know and penalized for what
00:27:32
they don't this is kind of the Habit
00:27:34
that is ingrained in Us in school and
00:27:37
it's incredibly hard to unlearn you
00:27:39
memorize and repeat when you don't know
00:27:41
there's consequence and in order for us
00:27:43
to be comfortable discussing a topic and
00:27:46
sharing our opinion we need to have the
00:27:49
option to say I don't
00:27:51
know and I tell you speaking from
00:27:55
experience that brings a tremendous
00:27:58
amount of comfort knowing that after all
00:28:00
this attempt to figure it out if there's
00:28:03
something there if there's something
00:28:06
there if there's not sometimes saying
00:28:08
that is the most articulate answer and
00:28:11
to help you with this here's a document
00:28:12
that I've created that lists how every
00:28:14
Elite Communicator has displayed this
00:28:16
intellectual humility in their
00:28:18
interviews press junkets and
00:28:20
conversation I suggest picking one of
00:28:22
these lines reworking it to yourself and
00:28:24
using it knowing that you have this
00:28:26
option to say I don't know and that you
00:28:29
can word it
00:28:30
well brings a tremendous amount of
00:28:33
comfort and confidence in your pursuit
00:28:35
of articulating your
00:28:38
opinion hope that helps