THREAD
The world is littered with hacks and quick fixes.

Magic routines, butter in our coffee, special supplements, exotic foods. All promising to transform our lives.

Nearly all of it is BS. Here are 12 science-backed "hacks" that actually work.
Read a Book.

An expert in their field has taken their vast knowledge and distilled it to what's most important. Writing forces you to make difficult decisions on what's important and what's not. Writing demands clarity. You're getting an expert's lifetime of work for $15.
Talk to people who know more.

The best way to "hack" knowledge? Have a conversation with those who are informed. They've done the hard part of figuring out of sorting through the mess of information AND making sense of it. Having a conversation brings clarity for application.
Show up, no matter what.

Day after day. Sit down to write. Get out to exercise. Whatever the task you're trying to master, just keep showing up.

If you show up enough, you'll get better.
Sleep.

Just getting your 8+ hours has enormous benefits from the psychological to physical. Sleep is when your body restores & grows with its highest output of growth hormones, & when your mind processes and coalesces information. Translating knowledge from superficial to deep
Move. Often easy. Occasionally with ferocious intensity.

Get out and move. Most should be easy to moderate so you can keep coming back day after day. Some should be moderate/hard. And very occasionally you should "go see god" to remind yourself what going to the well is like.
Find Nature.

Being outside can increase creativity, mood, and well-being. Just being near nature, according to one study, was equivalent health-wise to being 7 years younger. Even just looking at pictures of nature can do the trick, improving mood and performance.
Form Lasting Relationships.

One of our fundamental needs as a person is to belong. If we satisfy this need, our health and motivation improve We're more likely to persist, and tackle difficult challenges.
One study found that being with a friend or loved one made challenging tasks appear to be a bit more manageable. Another found that being around a loved one, decreased our stress response to frightening things.

Feeling like we belong allows us to feel secure in who we are.
Surround Yourself Wisely

Moods and behaviors are contagious. Research from the Framingham study found that sadness and happiness rippled through the town. Living nearby a friend who becomes happy increases your probability of becoming happy by 25%
Research has found that sitting close to a high performer improved performance by 15%.

Sitting close to a low performer decreased performance by 30%.

Surround yourself with people who lift you up. insight.kellogg.northwestern.edu/article/sittin…
Challenge Yourself Ever So Slightly

When life is too easy, we get bored and unmotivated. When we don't have a shot at winning, our motivation wanes and we give up.

Find challenges that are in the sweet spot of just beyond your current capabilities. A slight stretch.
For most, don't diet.

Find something that is sustainable. Dieting is akin to going all-in on the latest exercise fad, lasting for 3 weeks and giving up exercising for 6 months…It's much better to find something that is sustainable for you.
What you find sustainable will be different from me and friends and family. That's fine. Eat real foods and limit heavily processed ones. Your diet isn't your religion or who you are.
Behave like a Kindergartner...(on some things!)

Follow your interests. Go deep when something catches your eye. But don't be afraid to ditch it and move on to the next thing if it no longer meets your needs. Don't tie your identity too closely to what you do. Explore the world.
Have a purpose that's greater than yourself.

A self-transcending purpose allows us to persist a bit longer, perform a bit better. In physical pursuits, our brain loosens the reigns allowing us to dig a bit deeper.
In life, according to a Harvard study, those who had meaning and purpose in their life lived longer and healthier lives. cnbc.com/2017/11/21/har…
None of these things are real "hacks." In fact, they are all pretty boring and straightforward.

Move. Sleep. Belong.

But that's the point. We spend so much time looking for shortcuts when the boring stuff right in front of us has a much bigger effect.

Choose the boring stuff!
Most of us need to focus on the 99%, not the 1%.

We are seeking the silver bullet, when the reality is we need to zoom back out and nail the basics before we even consider the final 1 percent.
If you enjoyed this thread, I tweet threads about the science of performance 2x per week, so follow along!

If you like deep dives on topics, consider checking out my free weekly newsletter.

Thanks for taking the time to read my work! thegrowtheq.com/newsletter-sig…

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More from @stevemagness

9 Feb
THREAD- Why pro sports teams might want to have videos of nature playing in the locker room at half time.

The science of nature (even the virtual kind) and its surprising benefits on recovery, restoration, and resilience.
In 1984, psychologist Roger Ullrich found a strange phenomenon among patients who had surgery.

Those whose hospital window faced trees or a park recovered markedly faster and took less pain medication than those who had a view of a building.

researchgate.net/publication/17…
This effect carried over when scientists evaluated people’s own living conditions.

And not just for their short-term coping with stress, but their overall health. Have a view of some trees, you’re in luck.
Read 15 tweets
4 Feb
THREAD: When I was in high school I was a running phenom.

Then I largely failed.

Here are lessons for the driven that I wish I knew when I was obsessively training and neglecting just about everything else:
Being really good at something at a young age narrows your world. It seems like nothing else matters. That's false.

We need mentors and adults in the world to provide perspective. Having the ability to zoom out is one of the most important skills you can develop.
There are other paths besides going all-in, all the time.

Being obsessed about something seems like a prerequisite for success. That hard work and the grind is what will get you there. That's an illusion.
Read 18 tweets
1 Feb
THREAD on Leadership and Culture

I've been fortunate to have a lot of successful mentors help along the way. One of the unexpected ones was in the world of football.

Here are 11 lessons I took away from a Super Bowl-winning General Manager on leading a successful team:
Everyone in the building reflects the organization.

Treat them all like they matter because they do.
Don't take motivation for granted.

We often assume the best athletes, the ones who are self-driven, are okay, and don't need motivation.

Don't. They are people. Check-in.
Read 13 tweets
29 Jan
THREAD: What is Great Coaching?

Here are 11 insights I've learned over the past 10 years in working with world-class athletes and coaches across sports.

On Learning, Motivation, Culture, and Sustainable Performance.

👇👇👇
1. Do the Work to Understand.

When you don't know what you're doing, you tend to focus on the small things that don't actually matter. You emphasize what you can control, not what has an actual impact

Do the work to differentiate what looks good versus what impacts performance
2. Drop the Ego. Find People Who Know More.

The best coaches seek out wisdom from others.

Fiercely guarding your "secrets" backfires. Coaching comes from conversation. The more smart thinkers you're talking to, the clearer your thinking will be.
Read 13 tweets
27 Jan
Figuring out who to listen to and what's right/wrong in the world of social media, podcasters, and experts of everything is difficult.

As a scientist and writer here's1 trick & 6 lessons on figuring out if a writer, podcaster, or expert should be listened to or not. 👇👇👇
First, the quick way:
See what an expert says about something in an area you have expertise in.

For example, I search for where they talk about exercise or athletic performance.

If they are wrong but confident in it. It tells you that something is wrong in their thinking
They overindex on superficial understanding and don't do the deep work.

It doesn't mean they'll be wrong on everything, but it should make you question whenever the person ventures away from an area where they've had 'skin in the game' success in.
Read 18 tweets
25 Jan
Leading into today's game, the Packer's defensive coordinator made his team watch last year's loss of the NFC championship.

Let's take a look at why focusing on the negative right before a big game might not be the best idea...

A Thread on hormones & priming for performance:
What we watch can prime us for performance. We intuitively know this. We can sense our emotions and moods change as we watch something good or bad.

But what we often neglect is the hormonal impact that occurs, which can cause a performance impact for days.
Let's walk through a few studies. In this study, researchers found watching a victory increased Testosterone levels by 44%. When watching a defeat, no significant change in T levels.
researchgate.net/publication/26…
Read 14 tweets

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