Watch this if you’re feeling lost
Resumo
TLDRThe video addresses the common feelings of being lost and behind in life, discussing how many, especially college graduates, feel pressured to meet milestones that others seem to achieve effortlessly. Ali shares five personal strategies to cope with these feelings, based on ideas presented by neuroscientist Anne-Laure Le Cunff. The first strategy is to understand the Red Queen effect, which describes the constant race to keep up with society. The second is identifying invisible scripts or unexamined narratives that guide personal decisions. The third emphasizes the value of embracing liminal spaces—periods of uncertainty and transition—as opportunities for growth rather than discomfort. The fourth strategy suggests escaping the tyranny of purpose, focusing instead on what brings meaning in different life seasons. Finally, the fifth strategy encourages viewers to run tiny experiments instead of setting rigid goals, allowing for exploration and self-discovery. Through these strategies, individuals can navigate feelings of inadequacy and ultimately find personal fulfillment.
Conclusões
- 🏃♀️ Recognize the Red Queen effect in modern life.
- 🧠 Identify and challenge your invisible scripts.
- 🔄 Embrace liminal spaces during transitions.
- ❌ Reject the tyranny of singular purpose.
- 🔍 Run tiny experiments to discover what works for you.
- 📱 Be mindful of social media comparisons.
- ⏳ Understand and combat time anxiety.
- 📖 Purpose evolves as you change in life.
- 📊 Approach goals experimentally rather than linearly.
Linha do tempo
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
This video addresses feelings of being lost and behind in life, acknowledging that many people struggle with uncertainty about their direction and milestones. The speaker shares five strategies that have helped them navigate these feelings, emphasizing the importance of embracing perpetual transformation and recognizing that change is an inherent part of life.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
Strategy number one focuses on the Red Queen effect, which describes the pressure to constantly run faster in life without feeling like one is getting ahead. This pressure is intensified by social comparison, especially through social media. The speaker encourages recognizing this phenomenon and questioning why one feels the need to rush, promoting the idea that it's okay to take one's time in life.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
The second strategy involves identifying invisible scripts—cognitive patterns that dictate behavior and thought processes. The speaker highlights three types of scripts: the sequel script, the crowd pleaser script, and the epic script, noting that these can lead to feeling lost and pressured to conform to societal expectations. By becoming aware of these scripts, viewers can pave their own authentic path.
- 00:15:00 - 00:22:27
Strategy number three introduces the concept of liminal spaces, which refer to transitional phases in life where clarity and direction are often absent. The speaker argues that instead of rushing through these uncomfortable periods, it's beneficial to embrace them as opportunities for personal growth and self-discovery. This is linked to the idea that uncertainty can be a normal and valuable part of life.
Mapa mental
Vídeo de perguntas e respostas
What are the main feelings people have when watching this video?
Feelings of being lost, behind in life, and uncertainty about personal milestones.
What is the Red Queen effect?
It refers to the feeling of needing to constantly run faster just to stay in the same place.
What are invisible scripts?
Cognitive patterns that dictate how we navigate life, often based on societal expectations.
How can one embrace liminal spaces?
By accepting uncertainty during transitional periods in life instead of rushing for certainty.
What does running tiny experiments mean?
It means trying small, actionable changes in life to gather data about what feels meaningful.
Is finding one purpose necessary?
Not necessarily; purpose can evolve and change throughout different seasons of life.
How can social media affect feelings of inadequacy?
It intensifies comparison with others, leading to feelings of being behind in life.
What is time anxiety?
The feeling of being late in life compared to peers and social expectations.
Who is the main speaker in the video?
Ali, a doctor turned entrepreneur and author.
What is suggested as a mental approach toward life's milestones?
To redefine success and prioritize personal fulfillment over societal benchmarks.
Ver mais resumos de vídeos
- 00:00:00if you clicked on this video then maybe
- 00:00:01you're feeling a little lost maybe you
- 00:00:03feel like you're behind in life that
- 00:00:05other people have found their true
- 00:00:06passion or they're making a load of
- 00:00:07money or they found love and maybe you
- 00:00:09haven't yet hit those Milestones that
- 00:00:11you were hoping to hit by this point
- 00:00:13maybe you feel like you're in a
- 00:00:14transitional state in your life right
- 00:00:16now where things seem to be changing and
- 00:00:18you're not sure if the direction of
- 00:00:19change is really what you want and maybe
- 00:00:21you're not even sure what you really
- 00:00:22want because there's so many options out
- 00:00:24there for what you could do with your
- 00:00:25work and your life and you don't want to
- 00:00:27waste years of your life going down the
- 00:00:28wrong path so you end up feeling a
- 00:00:30little paralyzed I've had these thoughts
- 00:00:32and feelings at various points of my
- 00:00:33life as well and so in this video I
- 00:00:34wanted to share five strategies that
- 00:00:36I've personally found really helpful
- 00:00:38that I hope you might too from a
- 00:00:39neuroscientist who studies and writes
- 00:00:41about this stuff for a living embracing
- 00:00:43the fact that you are in Perpetual
- 00:00:45transformation that the person you are
- 00:00:46today is different from the person you
- 00:00:48will be tomorrow and sometimes it can be
- 00:00:50a little bit uncomfortable when you're
- 00:00:52going from one state to the other that's
- 00:00:54fine that's just what life is this is
- 00:00:56literally part of the definition of life
- 00:00:57so that's an LA Lun she is a neuros ien
- 00:01:00IST former Google executive and author
- 00:01:01of the wonderful book a tiny experiments
- 00:01:03which is sort of the neuroscientist
- 00:01:05guide to navigating this feeling of
- 00:01:07uncertainty that a lot of us have about
- 00:01:08whether we're really making the right
- 00:01:09choices in life and by the way if we
- 00:01:11haven't met hello my name is Ali I'm a
- 00:01:12doctor turned entrepreneur and author of
- 00:01:14The New York Times bestseller Feelgood
- 00:01:16productivity which is about how to be
- 00:01:17more productive in a way that feels good
- 00:01:18these days my main gig is that my wife
- 00:01:20and I along with our team are building a
- 00:01:22series of productivity apps that we wish
- 00:01:23existed in the world and on the side
- 00:01:25since 2017 I've been making videos on
- 00:01:27this channel that are all about the
- 00:01:28books strategies and tools that we can
- 00:01:29use to help build a life that we love so
- 00:01:31if that soundss like fun then you might
- 00:01:32consider
- 00:01:33subscribing strategy number one
- 00:01:35recognize the Red Queen effect so the
- 00:01:38Red Queen effect comes from a quote from
- 00:01:39Alice in Wonderland where she's speaking
- 00:01:41to the red queen and the Red Queen
- 00:01:42basically says you have to run really
- 00:01:44really fast to keep in the same place
- 00:01:46and if you want to get anywhere in life
- 00:01:47you have to run twice as fast as you're
- 00:01:48physically capable of doing and so the
- 00:01:50Red Queen effect is this feeling that we
- 00:01:51have in Modern Life where we have to
- 00:01:53keep on running faster and faster on the
- 00:01:55treadmill of life but somehow we still
- 00:01:57feel like we are falling behind we're
- 00:01:58working longer hours we are optim in the
- 00:02:00out of our morning routines we are
- 00:02:01hustling on our side projects and our
- 00:02:02personal Brands and we are doing all
- 00:02:04this while we are scrolling the
- 00:02:05highlight reels of other people's lives
- 00:02:07who seem to be further ahead than we are
- 00:02:09and this never-ending race this hamster
- 00:02:10Wheeling that we're all doing is the
- 00:02:11perfect setup for what neuroscientists
- 00:02:13like ANW call time anxiety time anxiety
- 00:02:16is this belief this Sensation that you
- 00:02:19have that you're late in life that you
- 00:02:21haven't done enough yet that your peers
- 00:02:24are doing better faster and living more
- 00:02:27interesting lives when I first read
- 00:02:29about time anx in the book I was like
- 00:02:31yes this is it this is the name of that
- 00:02:33feeling that I've had at various points
- 00:02:34throughout my life when I was in high
- 00:02:36school and applying to medical school
- 00:02:37like it was this feeling that other
- 00:02:38people out there had done more work
- 00:02:40experience had better grades had more
- 00:02:42things on their CV when I was in medical
- 00:02:43school and trying to become a doctor it
- 00:02:44was this feeling that like you know
- 00:02:45other people are able to get ahead in
- 00:02:47their studies and they're also really
- 00:02:49popular and they're also doing the
- 00:02:50sports and they're also getting these
- 00:02:51Publications and extra CV points and now
- 00:02:53in my life as an entrepreneur and author
- 00:02:54it's like oh man I should be doing more
- 00:02:55book promotion because these other
- 00:02:57authors are selling more books and now
- 00:02:58we're building all these apps but like
- 00:02:59they're not growing fast enough like we
- 00:03:01could grow them faster if we just did
- 00:03:02more things it's this time anxiety thing
- 00:03:04that like time is running out and I am
- 00:03:05not moving fast enough it really stems
- 00:03:08from social comparison because we all
- 00:03:10have this giant leaderboard that we're
- 00:03:11all looking at where we see that our
- 00:03:14friend or our colleague or this person
- 00:03:16we used to know is already there in
- 00:03:18their career or has this salary or is
- 00:03:20married with two kids already and we
- 00:03:22haven't done these things yet we keep on
- 00:03:24comparing our timelines and this is what
- 00:03:26creates the time anxiety so people
- 00:03:28probably would have had time anxiety
- 00:03:29back in the day but back in the day the
- 00:03:31only people you could feasibly compare
- 00:03:32yourself to were other people who were
- 00:03:34around you whereas now in the realm of
- 00:03:36social media with YouTube and Instagram
- 00:03:37and Tik Tok obviously all of the stuff
- 00:03:39we're no longer just comparing Our Lives
- 00:03:40to the people around us we are comparing
- 00:03:42Our Lives to literally everyone else in
- 00:03:44the world and because of the way the
- 00:03:45algorithms are set up we are very
- 00:03:46unlikely to come across an Instagram re
- 00:03:48from someone who's leading a totally
- 00:03:49normal life instead we're going to come
- 00:03:51across these Instagram reals of these
- 00:03:52people who are like I don't know
- 00:03:53building custom furniture for their kids
- 00:03:55or growing a$1 million business to a
- 00:03:56billion dollars in revenue and valuation
- 00:03:58and so whatever game you are playing in
- 00:03:59your life there are always people who
- 00:04:01are further ahead of that game that
- 00:04:02you're going to encounter on the social
- 00:04:04media feeds and with this sort of thing
- 00:04:05there really is no Finishing Line it's a
- 00:04:07constant game of comparison the whole
- 00:04:09keeping up with the Joneses thing just
- 00:04:11supercharged in the realm of social
- 00:04:12media so firstly is to recognize that
- 00:04:13literally everyone has this feeling I
- 00:04:15have spoken to people who are
- 00:04:16billionaires who have the feeling that
- 00:04:17like they're not working hard enough
- 00:04:19because their neighbor has more billions
- 00:04:21in the bank than they do and the second
- 00:04:22thing to recognize is that you can never
- 00:04:24really win this game if you playing the
- 00:04:26game in the first place so the question
- 00:04:27is not how do I catch up and how do I
- 00:04:29feel this behind it's why am I feeling
- 00:04:31as if I'm in this race in the first
- 00:04:33place and there is a really good prompt
- 00:04:34which is what would your life look like
- 00:04:36if you didn't feel like you were in such
- 00:04:37a rush what would change about how
- 00:04:39you're leading your life what would
- 00:04:40change about how you're doing your work
- 00:04:41or running your business what would
- 00:04:42change if you didn't feel like you were
- 00:04:44in such a rush and this is something
- 00:04:46that every time I think about it it just
- 00:04:47like I'm just like ah just gives me a
- 00:04:50feeling of Liberation I don't need to be
- 00:04:52in a rush we do not need to be rushing
- 00:04:54we don't need to have this feeling that
- 00:04:56we are behind on the Milestones oh by
- 00:04:58the way if you are enjoying this video
- 00:04:59and in the majority of my audience who
- 00:05:01either are a Creator or would like to be
- 00:05:02a Creator someday then you might like to
- 00:05:04check out spotter Studio who are very
- 00:05:06kindly sponsoring today's video now I
- 00:05:07wanted to show you a little bit of a
- 00:05:08behind the-scenes look at how I come up
- 00:05:11with ideas for my videos because coming
- 00:05:12up with fresh and hopefully
- 00:05:13non-repetitive content ideas week after
- 00:05:15week is honestly one of the hardest
- 00:05:16parts about being a Creator and that's
- 00:05:18why my team and I have been using
- 00:05:19spotter Studio which is an incredible AI
- 00:05:21powered platform specifically designed
- 00:05:22for creators like us and it's basically
- 00:05:24changed our entire ideation process for
- 00:05:26making videos so what you can do is
- 00:05:27whenever you're creating a new video you
- 00:05:28can create a new project you can put in
- 00:05:30the title and thumbnail that you're
- 00:05:31thinking about for the project and then
- 00:05:33you can brainstorm which is super nice
- 00:05:35and I quite like explode which then uses
- 00:05:37the AI to kind of take the idea that
- 00:05:38you've come up with and give you a bunch
- 00:05:40of different options that could work for
- 00:05:41an alternative framing of that
- 00:05:43particular video and you can see for
- 00:05:44example which specific words are
- 00:05:45outperforming in different niches like
- 00:05:47storm apparently does really well in
- 00:05:48titles World apparently does really well
- 00:05:50in titles and so I can find something I
- 00:05:52like to look off like your guide when
- 00:05:53feeling lost and then you can kind of go
- 00:05:54through and short list your titles
- 00:05:56there's also a very helpful outliers
- 00:05:57tool here which kind of figures out what
- 00:05:59the niche of your YouTube channel is and
- 00:06:00then looks for other videos that are
- 00:06:02overperforming from other channels
- 00:06:03within a similar Niche and this is the
- 00:06:05sort of thing that used to be really
- 00:06:06manual and kind of time consuming back
- 00:06:07in the day but now spotter makes it
- 00:06:09really easy with this outlier analysis
- 00:06:10and then if there's a video that you
- 00:06:11like the look of you can use the
- 00:06:12brainstorm feature which then helps you
- 00:06:14take that General concept and do it in
- 00:06:15your own way spotter Studio has saved me
- 00:06:17and my team so much time on ideation and
- 00:06:19research which means I can focus on the
- 00:06:20thing that I actually enjoy which is
- 00:06:22like creating the content rather than
- 00:06:23worrying about how to package the
- 00:06:24content and so if you're a Creator who
- 00:06:26wants to take a more datadriven approach
- 00:06:27to your content strategy then check out
- 00:06:29spot Studio using the link in the video
- 00:06:30description and they're constantly
- 00:06:32adding new features and tools to help
- 00:06:33creators like us hopefully make more
- 00:06:35useful videos for our audience so thank
- 00:06:37you so much spotter studio for
- 00:06:38sponsoring this video now a big part of
- 00:06:40why we feel as if we are behind in these
- 00:06:41specific Milestones that leads us to
- 00:06:43strategy number two which is to identify
- 00:06:45your invisible scripts so cognitive
- 00:06:47scripts are little patterns little
- 00:06:49stories that we have stored in our
- 00:06:52brains and that help us navigate our
- 00:06:54lives and the world in the most
- 00:06:56efficient way possible and those scripts
- 00:06:58tell you how you're supposed to behave
- 00:07:01and in what order in what situation so
- 00:07:03to give you an example let's say you go
- 00:07:05to the dentist and they ask you to open
- 00:07:08your mouth right in the waiting room in
- 00:07:10front of everybody you'd be like what I
- 00:07:13thought I was supposed to right and
- 00:07:15that's a cognitive script everybody has
- 00:07:17it we all know that you go there you
- 00:07:19wait in the waiting room they're going
- 00:07:20to call your name and then you go in the
- 00:07:22doctor's office and then you open your
- 00:07:23mouth so this idea of cognitive scripts
- 00:07:25was first identified by Roger shank and
- 00:07:27Robert ablon who were scientists back in
- 00:07:28the 1970s and the thing is like these
- 00:07:30cognitive scripts can be really useful
- 00:07:32and they're useful because they're
- 00:07:32mental shortcuts that we can take so
- 00:07:34that we don't need to figure out how to
- 00:07:35order coffee every time we order coffee
- 00:07:37or like figure out how to cross the road
- 00:07:38from scratch every time we're trying to
- 00:07:39cross the road but with all the time and
- 00:07:41brain space that these cognitive scripts
- 00:07:43save there is also a darker side to
- 00:07:44these cognitive scripts because they can
- 00:07:46basically hijack the most important
- 00:07:48decisions of our lives like what we do
- 00:07:49for school or career or relationships
- 00:07:51without us even realizing it because we
- 00:07:53have inadvertently subconsciously taken
- 00:07:55that mental shortcut and we end up
- 00:07:57living our life according to someone
- 00:07:58else's screenplay now in the book and
- 00:08:00law talks about three specific cognitive
- 00:08:02scripts that keep us feeling lost and
- 00:08:04uncertain about where we're going
- 00:08:05firstly we have the sequel script this
- 00:08:07is when we feel like we need to make
- 00:08:10decisions today based on what we did
- 00:08:13yesterday so for example when you finish
- 00:08:15University you might only consider the
- 00:08:17types of jobs that are aligned with the
- 00:08:19studies that you did something that
- 00:08:21makes sense that will make for a clean
- 00:08:22CV a nice story nobody's going to be
- 00:08:25confused it's just that movie but again
- 00:08:29sequ if you work in management
- 00:08:30consulting for example there are a few
- 00:08:32pretty obvious sequels you could do like
- 00:08:34private Equity Investment Banking uh do
- 00:08:35an NBA and so there's this profound like
- 00:08:37subconscious pressure to do the next
- 00:08:39thing that makes sense based on whatever
- 00:08:41the previous thing was and then we have
- 00:08:42popular script number two which is the
- 00:08:44crowd pleaser script the crowd pleaser
- 00:08:46is when you use a script that you know
- 00:08:48is going to make everybody around you
- 00:08:50happy nobody's going to be disappointed
- 00:08:51especially not your parents so in this
- 00:08:53one you might go for a career that
- 00:08:55you're not that excited about but that
- 00:08:57you know everybody's going to be happy
- 00:08:58about this is naturally where we
- 00:09:00prioritize external validation sometimes
- 00:09:02without even realizing it and that's why
- 00:09:04we feel sometimes we're like you know
- 00:09:05I'm doing this thing to please my
- 00:09:07parents or cuz Society told me to
- 00:09:09whatever society means anyway and like I
- 00:09:11don't feel like it's quite the right
- 00:09:12thing and then we have the third one
- 00:09:13that personally hit me the hardest which
- 00:09:15is the Epic script it's the idea that if
- 00:09:17you're going to do something with your
- 00:09:19life it better be big it better be a
- 00:09:22Hollywood movie and because of that we
- 00:09:24make ourselves miserable trying to find
- 00:09:26our passion to find our purpose if if we
- 00:09:29can't find it if we feel a bit lost if
- 00:09:32we're still searching for what is that
- 00:09:34thing that makes us want to wake up in
- 00:09:36the morning we feel like we're a failure
- 00:09:38this is the one I've been grappling with
- 00:09:39for the last few months where it feels
- 00:09:40like okay I mean I've done the YouTube
- 00:09:42thing and I've wrote my book it got to
- 00:09:43the bestseller list like what's the next
- 00:09:45even bigger thing it feels pretty weird
- 00:09:47to be saying like you know what I'm
- 00:09:48pretty content where I am you know I've
- 00:09:50just gotten married I've got a kid on
- 00:09:51the way I just want to chill out and
- 00:09:52spend time with the family like that's
- 00:09:53kind of what I want to do but it's also
- 00:09:55like I kind of want to do these other
- 00:09:56things and like this build the software
- 00:09:58stuff and I have feel this pressure that
- 00:10:00like the next thing has to be even
- 00:10:01bigger than the last thing because like
- 00:10:03you know it's kind of lame if I'm just
- 00:10:04making productivity content for the rest
- 00:10:06of my life right and so what I found
- 00:10:07really helpful from reading the book and
- 00:10:08from having the conversation with anore
- 00:10:09is to just just have the terminology for
- 00:10:11this to recognize oh yeah that's why I
- 00:10:13feel pulled towards this thing it's
- 00:10:14because there is this subconscious
- 00:10:16script that's playing out in my mind
- 00:10:18that the next thing I do must be by
- 00:10:20definition bigger than the last thing
- 00:10:22that I did even if that's running the
- 00:10:23risk of me making decisions that aren't
- 00:10:25actually aligned with my my own
- 00:10:26authentic values but then this feeling
- 00:10:28of uncertainty this feeling of like what
- 00:10:29am I even doing like am I am I going
- 00:10:31there or am I going there I'm going
- 00:10:32there I've got the I've got all these
- 00:10:33different options this feeling of
- 00:10:35uncertainty embracing this feeling of
- 00:10:37uncertainty leads us to strategy number
- 00:10:38three that I found incredibly helpful oh
- 00:10:40by the way if you looking for some
- 00:10:41introspective exercises to help you
- 00:10:43navigate these cognitive scripts I have
- 00:10:45created a completely free resource the
- 00:10:47journaling Hub which is a completely
- 00:10:48free constantly evolving document where
- 00:10:50I store my favorite journaling prompts
- 00:10:52for introspection about these big
- 00:10:53questions about what we should do with
- 00:10:54our lives if you like that sort of thing
- 00:10:56and you want to try some of these
- 00:10:56questions there is a link down below
- 00:10:58it's completely free so strateg number
- 00:10:59three is to embrace linal spaces now if
- 00:11:02there was only one thing that I was
- 00:11:03allowed to take away from this book it
- 00:11:04would be this terminology this idea of a
- 00:11:06Lial space a Lial space is an in between
- 00:11:09it's a time in your life where you're
- 00:11:11not quite sure what you should be doing
- 00:11:13next where there are no clear rules
- 00:11:15where there's no definition of success
- 00:11:17that you can follow no recipe that you
- 00:11:19can apply and the automatic reaction
- 00:11:21that we have when we find ourselves in
- 00:11:22the Lial spaces to try and cross it as
- 00:11:25quickly as possible get back on Shore
- 00:11:27get back to safety so the word lional
- 00:11:29comes from the Latin lemon meaning
- 00:11:31threshold the idea is that you are
- 00:11:33standing at this threshold this doorway
- 00:11:34between who you were and who you are
- 00:11:36becoming you're not quite there but
- 00:11:37you're also not quite here you're in
- 00:11:39this sort of in between space now these
- 00:11:40Lial spaces are everywhere in our lives
- 00:11:42we can have physical Lial spaces like
- 00:11:44being in an airport or being in a lift
- 00:11:46or being in a waiting room these places
- 00:11:48aren't destinations in and of themselves
- 00:11:49they tend to be transitional places
- 00:11:51between other places you can have
- 00:11:53physiological Lial spaces like a going
- 00:11:54through puberty where you're sort of
- 00:11:56neither here nor there or as my wife
- 00:11:57tells me the process of becoming a
- 00:11:58mother where where is it's sort of like
- 00:12:00you're in this in between space between
- 00:12:02not being a m and being a m but then
- 00:12:03there's the third category of Lial
- 00:12:05spaces that a lot of us might have found
- 00:12:06ourselves in which is emotional Lial
- 00:12:08spaces like where you finish University
- 00:12:09before you have landed your first job
- 00:12:11and you have this like weird Gap and
- 00:12:13whenever we are in these Lial spaces it
- 00:12:15is totally normal for that uncertainty
- 00:12:17of the space to feel really
- 00:12:18uncomfortable you don't know what your
- 00:12:20role is you don't know where you're
- 00:12:21going you don't know who else is in that
- 00:12:23space you don't know how big the space
- 00:12:25is then it's really scary your brain is
- 00:12:28looking at this and feel like we have
- 00:12:30zero information let's get out of here
- 00:12:32so from an evolutionary perspective this
- 00:12:33makes perfect sense like uncertainty
- 00:12:35used to equal danger if you didn't know
- 00:12:37where your next meal was coming from
- 00:12:38then that was a legitimate survival
- 00:12:40threat and so our brain evolved over
- 00:12:42like 300,000 years to develop mechanisms
- 00:12:44that reduce the amount of uncertainty in
- 00:12:46our lives and help us feel comfortable
- 00:12:48with certainty but then the problem that
- 00:12:49we have is that this survival mechanism
- 00:12:51can completely backfire in our modern
- 00:12:53lives and so whenever we are in one of
- 00:12:54these Lial uncomfortable uncertain
- 00:12:56spaces like this threshold between two
- 00:12:58things
- 00:12:59the in between space where you just quit
- 00:13:01your job and you're not sure what the
- 00:13:02next thing is the Primitive regions of
- 00:13:03the brain are so wired to like rush to
- 00:13:06something certain as soon as possible so
- 00:13:08that we can feel safe but the key thing
- 00:13:09ANL talks about in her book and that we
- 00:13:10talked about in the conversation as well
- 00:13:12is that rather than trying to escape
- 00:13:13ainal space we should Instead try to
- 00:13:16embrace it good way to think about limal
- 00:13:18spaces is to picture yourself on a plane
- 00:13:20where you're going somewhere so there
- 00:13:22are two ways that you could react if you
- 00:13:24find yourself on a plane the first one
- 00:13:26is to start panicking because you're not
- 00:13:28the one one in the pilot seat you have
- 00:13:30zero control and you're in this tin can
- 00:13:33that is flying super quickly in the sky
- 00:13:36right but there's another way you can
- 00:13:37consider this experience this is an
- 00:13:39amazing opportunity to have time for
- 00:13:42yourself completely disconnected from
- 00:13:44the world no Wi-fi nobody can reach you
- 00:13:47and you can finally read that book that
- 00:13:48you've been wanting to read for a long
- 00:13:50time you can Journal you can even watch
- 00:13:52that kind of Sil movie that your friends
- 00:13:54would be a little bit surprised to see
- 00:13:55you watch and this is basically the two
- 00:13:58Reas reactions that you can have in the
- 00:14:00linal space now having this conversation
- 00:14:01with ANW was genuinely transformative to
- 00:14:03me like we had a conversation a couple
- 00:14:04months ago and at the time I was in the
- 00:14:05throws of like like do I do I go here
- 00:14:08with this software stuff or do I like
- 00:14:09write another book or do I do this
- 00:14:11YouTube thing or do I like do try and do
- 00:14:12something even bigger and reading the
- 00:14:14book and the conversation made me
- 00:14:15realized that ah I in a Lial space it is
- 00:14:17normal for a Lial space to feel
- 00:14:19uncomfortable and it is normal for me to
- 00:14:21feel like uh-oh I'm not doing the right
- 00:14:23thing by trying to get to certainty as
- 00:14:26soon as possible and so the main thing
- 00:14:27that I really took away is that in those
- 00:14:28moments rather than trying to rush to
- 00:14:30make a decision it's actually totally
- 00:14:32okay to stay with that uncertainty to
- 00:14:35get comfortable with that feeling of
- 00:14:36uncertainty and to recognize that
- 00:14:38actually a lot of personal growth and a
- 00:14:39lot of figuring out what we truly
- 00:14:41authentically want comes from being in
- 00:14:43those Lial spaces rather than being
- 00:14:45outside of them all right so what do we
- 00:14:46do when we're in one of these Lial
- 00:14:47spaces well that's where strategy 4
- 00:14:49comes in which is to escape the tyranny
- 00:14:51of purpose now there is a cool graph
- 00:14:53that Anor shows in her book which is if
- 00:14:55you look at like how often in books the
- 00:14:57phrase find your purpose purp was
- 00:14:59mentioned this is what the graph looks
- 00:15:01like like in the last 200 years no one
- 00:15:02really cared that much about finding
- 00:15:04that purpose but in the last 20 years
- 00:15:06suddenly everyone is all about trying to
- 00:15:08find their big p purpose and the key
- 00:15:10argument that Anor makes in the book
- 00:15:11really is that this idea of finding your
- 00:15:13purpose came about as a way to reject
- 00:15:16the rigid traditional career path like
- 00:15:18most of us are probably not going to be
- 00:15:19in exactly the same career for 50 years
- 00:15:21like our parents maybe were and so we
- 00:15:23replaced that rigid traditional thinking
- 00:15:24with this idea of we've got to find our
- 00:15:26purpose but what Anor argues is that
- 00:15:28actually this find my one true purpose
- 00:15:30is equally restrictive as a traditional
- 00:15:33career once was like we thought that we
- 00:15:34were choosing Freedom like oh I can do
- 00:15:36whatever I want I can find my purpose
- 00:15:37but actually what she argues is that we
- 00:15:38have just swapped one cognitive script
- 00:15:40for another I found myself really
- 00:15:42resonating with this when we were having
- 00:15:43that conversation like I feel this
- 00:15:44pressure in my own life there's this
- 00:15:46constant feeling to identify that one
- 00:15:48thing that I'm supposedly supposed to do
- 00:15:49for the rest of my life and there are
- 00:15:50books that talk about this there's the
- 00:15:51one thing by gck K there's essentialism
- 00:15:54by Greg mccuan and I really like a lot
- 00:15:55of these books and a lot of the message
- 00:15:57behind them is that hey if you you know
- 00:15:58if you can find that one true thing then
- 00:16:00that's the thing that will get you out
- 00:16:01of bed in the morning and help you feel
- 00:16:02motivated when motivation inevitably
- 00:16:04dips and this feeling of like if I
- 00:16:06haven't yet found that one true thing
- 00:16:07then this you know I'm doing I'm doing
- 00:16:09something wrong but the problem with
- 00:16:10this sort of thinking is that we have
- 00:16:11turned purpose into a destination which
- 00:16:14is a fixed end point that we need to
- 00:16:15reach after which everything will
- 00:16:17magically make sense but this is another
- 00:16:19classic example of the arrival fallacy
- 00:16:21that's like a thing in Psychology that
- 00:16:22once we arrive at a particular
- 00:16:24destination then we will dot do dot be
- 00:16:25happy once I've gotten that promotion
- 00:16:27once I find my purpose then I will no
- 00:16:29longer struggle with what the point is
- 00:16:31but the truth is purpose is something
- 00:16:34that you live every day that changes
- 00:16:36that evolves with you because you change
- 00:16:39as a person and so instead of chasing it
- 00:16:41as almost as this destination that you
- 00:16:44need to reach ha I found my purpose I'm
- 00:16:46good I won it should really be something
- 00:16:49that you live with like a question that
- 00:16:51you have and that you keep on exploring
- 00:16:52for the entirety of your life and this
- 00:16:54was genuinely one of the most liberating
- 00:16:55ideas that I got from the conversation
- 00:16:56and from the book which is that what if
- 00:16:58per purpose is not something that you
- 00:17:00are looking for like this this treasure
- 00:17:02that you find once and for all and then
- 00:17:03you never have to think about it ever
- 00:17:04again what if purpose is instead this
- 00:17:06thing that we are continuously
- 00:17:08discovering and rediscovering as we go
- 00:17:10along so if you're at this point in the
- 00:17:11video and maybe you're feeling a little
- 00:17:12lost because you haven't found your one
- 00:17:14true purpose or your one true calling
- 00:17:16then maybe you're not the problem maybe
- 00:17:17it's just this definition that we have
- 00:17:18somehow scoped ourselves into believing
- 00:17:20that this purpose has to be this
- 00:17:21singular unchanging like unifying thing
- 00:17:24that will give everything in your life
- 00:17:25meaning and so instead of asking
- 00:17:26something really big like what is my
- 00:17:28life's purpose what would happen if we
- 00:17:29instead tried to ask oursel a question
- 00:17:31like what gives my life meaning right
- 00:17:32now in this season of life and I really
- 00:17:34like this idea of like seasonality in
- 00:17:36this current season of life for me what
- 00:17:37gives my life meaning on the workfront
- 00:17:39is continuing to make YouTube videos
- 00:17:40that I think are helpful and building
- 00:17:42cool productivity apps that I want to
- 00:17:43use every day and that hopefully
- 00:17:44millions of people can use but a few
- 00:17:45months from now when I become a dad then
- 00:17:46maybe the purpose thing will change and
- 00:17:48maybe my whole stick will be like oh my
- 00:17:50goodness the thing that gives my life
- 00:17:51meaning and purpose right now is
- 00:17:52spending time with my wife and daughter
- 00:17:53I don't know what's going to happen but
- 00:17:54the fact that I don't know and I'm now
- 00:17:56having read this book and had the
- 00:17:57conversation I'm now okay with not
- 00:17:59really knowing what the future could
- 00:18:00look like in terms of purpose that just
- 00:18:01gives me an enormous feeling of like
- 00:18:03Liberation and freedom and like ah I
- 00:18:05don't need to worry so much about this
- 00:18:06and so finally we come to strategy
- 00:18:07number five which is to run tiny
- 00:18:09experiments and that is why the title of
- 00:18:11the book is Tiny experiments how to live
- 00:18:13freely in a goal obsessed world and the
- 00:18:15idea here is that if we are in one of
- 00:18:16these Lial spaces where we feel a little
- 00:18:18bit lost we might find it helpful to
- 00:18:19shift away from thinking about linear
- 00:18:21goals to instead thinking about
- 00:18:23experimental goals a linear goal is a
- 00:18:25goal that has a very clear Milestone and
- 00:18:27it's a binary definition of success so
- 00:18:29either you make it to met school or you
- 00:18:32don't either you get the job or you
- 00:18:34don't get the job either your startup is
- 00:18:36a success or it's a failure it's very
- 00:18:38very binary now obviously the problem
- 00:18:40with linear goals is that they're kind
- 00:18:41of all or nothing you've either
- 00:18:42succeeded at the goal or you have failed
- 00:18:44at the goal and they put a lot of
- 00:18:45pressure on us now I think linear goals
- 00:18:46are totally fine in a lot of different
- 00:18:48circumstances like right now I have a
- 00:18:49linear goal to grow our various
- 00:18:50productivity apps but that's because I
- 00:18:52know that for me in the season of life
- 00:18:53right now building these productivity
- 00:18:55apps is a thing that I'm actively
- 00:18:56working towards it's a thing that I'm
- 00:18:58doing with my wife we formed a little
- 00:18:59bit of a family business around it we're
- 00:19:00working with our friends we're working
- 00:19:01with our team it's like a fun thing that
- 00:19:03we're doing and So within that specific
- 00:19:05context setting linear goals make sense
- 00:19:07but in a domain where you're feeling a
- 00:19:08little bit lost where you're not sure if
- 00:19:10whatever you're pursuing is the right
- 00:19:12thing to do linear goals make a lot less
- 00:19:14sense and the alternative is
- 00:19:15experimental goals so if you design a
- 00:19:17goal that's experimental rather than
- 00:19:19linear you're starting from a hypothesis
- 00:19:22instead of saying let's go there and if
- 00:19:24we don't get there we failed you say
- 00:19:27okay what if we tried this and you then
- 00:19:30design an experiment where you're going
- 00:19:32to collect data so you say that for a
- 00:19:34certain period of time you're going to
- 00:19:36perform that action that could be
- 00:19:38publishing a certain number of YouTube
- 00:19:39videos or that could be writing a
- 00:19:41newsletter that could be even for
- 00:19:42personal stuff your health meditation
- 00:19:44going to bed at the same time and you're
- 00:19:46not saying we're going to do that we're
- 00:19:48committing to this this is going to be a
- 00:19:50habit or that's the big goal for the
- 00:19:51next year you're saying this is an
- 00:19:53experiment whatever happens this is data
- 00:19:56there's no failure when the only
- 00:19:59objective is to see what happens if it
- 00:20:01works great you can keep going or you
- 00:20:03can even scale up if it doesn't you've
- 00:20:05learned something and you can use that
- 00:20:07information to inform your next
- 00:20:09experiment if you are in that moment of
- 00:20:10feeling like oh I haven't I haven't yet
- 00:20:12figured out what that path is or like
- 00:20:13what my career is right now instead of
- 00:20:15thinking I need to do a big thing to
- 00:20:17make this happen instead we want to
- 00:20:19think okay what is a tiny experiment
- 00:20:21that I might run that can just give me
- 00:20:23some more data and Anor talks about how
- 00:20:24you can structure these tiny experiments
- 00:20:26as packed p a CS now P act pack stands
- 00:20:29for purposeful so this thing should feel
- 00:20:31exciting and meaningful to you
- 00:20:32actionable something actually concrete
- 00:20:34that you can do continuous it's simple
- 00:20:36enough to repeat regularly for the
- 00:20:37duration of your experiment and
- 00:20:38trackable with a clear yes or no answer
- 00:20:40to did I actually do the thing like in
- 00:20:42my case back when I was a doctor and I
- 00:20:43was unsure of like do I quit medicine to
- 00:20:45do this YouTube thing or do I like kind
- 00:20:47of do both at the same time my
- 00:20:49hypothesis was okay I'm going to try
- 00:20:51part-time medicine and see what it feels
- 00:20:52like so I was like all right cool for
- 00:20:54the next few weeks I'm going to do two
- 00:20:55shifts every week of the hospital and
- 00:20:57see how I feel about it and I R the
- 00:20:58experiment I realized hm I don't even
- 00:21:00enjoy particularly doing those two
- 00:21:02shifts when the alternative is I can
- 00:21:03work on my business on my books on my
- 00:21:04YouTube channel and so that was a tiny
- 00:21:06experiment that I ran that gave me
- 00:21:07permission to just gather more data
- 00:21:09about what personally felt meaningful to
- 00:21:10me and so really the whole idea of
- 00:21:12creating tiny experiments is that we are
- 00:21:14reducing the pressure on us we don't
- 00:21:16have to find the right thing immediately
- 00:21:18you can just run a bunch of different
- 00:21:19tiny experiments and she's got a bunch
- 00:21:20of like strategies in the book that are
- 00:21:21really good that talk about more details
- 00:21:23about how to specifically carve out a
- 00:21:25tiny experiment in your life or multiple
- 00:21:27experiments based on what you want and
- 00:21:28the more of this data that you gather
- 00:21:30about yourself through these tiny
- 00:21:31experiments this becomes like a process
- 00:21:33of self-discovery where slowly you get
- 00:21:35all this data and you realize okay this
- 00:21:37is the sort of direction that I seem to
- 00:21:38be enjoying taking my life and so when
- 00:21:40you're in one of these Lial spaces where
- 00:21:41you feel lost you're not like wholesale
- 00:21:43trying to commit to a new path straight
- 00:21:45away you're staying in that Lial space
- 00:21:47you're embracing this feeling of
- 00:21:48discomfort you're running tiny
- 00:21:50experiments from this feeling of
- 00:21:51discomfort and as you gather more data
- 00:21:53you'll move to a new phase of your life
- 00:21:54where you won't be in so much of a Lial
- 00:21:56space and then the thing will happen
- 00:21:57again because after a few years you
- 00:21:58might realize you know what this new
- 00:22:00career that I'm in h I'm in a different
- 00:22:01season of life and I want something
- 00:22:02different and now you're back to the
- 00:22:03Lial space again where you've got to
- 00:22:05embrace the discomfort embrace the
- 00:22:06uncertainty and again run some tiny
- 00:22:09experiments from that place of Discovery
- 00:22:11now if you enjoyed this video I think
- 00:22:12you'll get a lot of value from this very
- 00:22:13short playlist of three videos that I
- 00:22:15created last year which are my favorite
- 00:22:17journaling prompts and methods for
- 00:22:18introspecting and helping you figure out
- 00:22:21what you really want if you're in one of
- 00:22:22these Lial spaces so check that out over
- 00:22:24there thank you so much for watching and
- 00:22:25I'll see you in the next video bye-bye
- transformation
- purpose
- anxiety
- self-discovery
- strategies
- liminal spaces
- invisible scripts
- Red Queen effect
- mental health
- personal growth