One pattern I've noticed in learners: They learn to enjoy the process. They celebrate the small wins, feel good overcoming obstacles, and release the judgment of not being at the final destination. If I didn't celebrate the wins of learning to draw simple shapes and shadows, I wouldn't be where I'm at in my art journey.
just a personal note, World's shortest guide to LEARNING pretty much ANYTHING fast ua-cam.com/video/aBY6ZeC5RcY/v-deo.htmlsi=grMLny6E3bM-5TNK 1. overcome procrastination - just do it, try to do it for 5 minute 2. learning zone - synapses will always be made when learn things 3. implementation - don’t rush to learn new things, practice what you’ve learnt first to build memory muscle 4. passion - find exactly why you want to learn it and what you want to get 5. skills - break it down into smaller chunks of what’s most important and least, that way you’ll know which skills will help you in the long run, practice those so that you’ll improve in short time 6. take care of your environment - no distraction to prevent unfocused, misunderstood, half understood
I like that tip about prioritizing and practicing the most important parts of a skill. That's why music teachers always tell you to practice your scales, because the vast majority of music is some form of a common scale.
Timestamps (Powered by Merlin AI) 00:04 - Exploring how a UA-camr excels in multiple diverse skills. 00:38 - Overcome procrastination to learn new skills effectively. 01:10 - Investing time creates a learning urge and enhances brain connectivity. 01:41 - Give your brain time to process new information for better retention. 02:11 - Develop a strong passion to fuel your learning journey. 02:38 - Break down skills into smaller, manageable chunks for effective learning. 03:10 - Prioritize key skills and optimize your learning environment for efficient practice. 03:38 - Eliminate distractions to improve focus and information retention.
I get it. My brother distracts me. That's why i locked him in the basement. Now i hear screaming every 5 hours but i will buy sound insulation materials and put them in front of the door. Thanks! :)
@@tmbthe1425 The screams stopped 11 days ago. I think he was drinking the leaked water, but he died of starvation. For now, no one asks what happened to him. I guess no one even noticed his absence.
Mhm. Humans innately don't like learning stuff? Though I see where you might be coming from, I don't think that's quite right. As humans the way we think fundamentaly shaped by pattern seeking behaviour. That's why we like hearing music, or watching movies, or reading a good book, because it stimulates that need for receiving information. Similar thing with social media in modern times. It stimulates that fundamental drive to seek out new experiences, and it does it in excess, ergo, lots of dopamine, thus more positive reinforcement of doing that, and so on with that. I don't think procrastination occurs because we dislike new experiences, but when the fear of what might happen when we try is larger that the desire to try. Humans are innately logical creatures. How could we not be? We simply interpret information and give a reaction accordingly. Now that doesn't mean our reactions always make sense, because what we know is never the full picture. So I think it is important to recognize that any such "excuses" are in fact all fundamentally logical. Indeed, that is the hard part, because you need to realize why you fear doing it for all those very logical reasons, come to terms with them, and fully make yourself understand why you should act despite all that. We're all just people, we only act the best way we know how. Doesn't mean we're always right, and doesn't mean we can always forgive anything, but it means we need to understand that the things we know and experiences we have are always limited. Any change to how you act, must begin with a change to how you think. And to do that, you must realize why you think the way you do first. You mention that it is the brains fault. That that's why we make all em' excuses. But isn't that just as much an excuse as the ones you're blaming? That brain is us. Most of it might be subconscious, but the conscious merely emerges from that subconscious. There is no actual distinction beyond us not consciously being aware of all that happens subconsciously. In the end it is our fault. We could have acted differently. We could have just started doing it right away. But we didn't. And that's fine! Important thing is we learn from it. Doesn't mean we always have to instantly apply all that either. No, learning is a gradual process. As you understand things, your mind shifts towards patterns incorporating new experiences. With time, you come to understand the underlying patterns in them. Next time you learn things it'll be easier, because you already know those underlying patterns it's based on. If we understand the most fundamental nature of reality, everything else simply emerges from that. So; you need to understand your apprehension towards doing things, why it's worth it despite the risks. You should not blindly do stuff just because the reward is great, but because the potential reward is greater than the risk. You should not get rid of your awareness of the risks, or of distractions, but learn to act despite them. Because otherwise you're just fooling yourself. You can never get rid of all distractions, nor should you, because just the potential reward itself can, at times, be a distraction. Similarly, blindly following the rewards without further awareness of why you desire it or of the fact that it was always just your best guess of how it would turn out, inevitably leads to disappointment, because regardless of wether you want it or not it did not fit your expectations. Thus, there will be negative reinforcement and you will further dislike doing new stuff in the future. Awareness is key. Know yourself, know your ills and your wells, your faults and your skills, your fears and expectations. And if you truly do, there will be no need to procrastinate.
A kissing cousin of procrastination is something a little darker: envy. Go to the comments of anyone demonstrating skill accumulation and you'll inevitably find comments saying that anyone one could do it if only X, where X is having the time, having the money, being better looking, having more supportive family members, and so on. Watching a typical UA-cam video and complaining about it on social media probably consumes around 30 minutes. That's enough time to make progress on something. It's actually around the time of something called a perdomo timer, something people use for productivity and task management.
Overall a good summarized video, that touches on all key factors. But, the 1st factor, procrastination is a big hurdle in itself. I feel like that needs to be emphasized more, since that is the "make it or break it" point of starting any journey
Wow! This is such a good, high-quality video. I'm really surprised that the channel only has 11.9K subscribers. You are highly underrated, my friend. The editing is fantastic and highly engaging. With the direction you're heading in, I'm certain that you will gain a larger and wider viewership. Keep it up!
That was mid at best... It was more about habits then learning, talked about the very surface of chuncking and then hinted at flow. Go check out justin sung for learning how to learn. Although there is better people then sung, he is the most popular in the subject.
I thought this was Colin Galen... The thumbnail are way too similiar. Not to bash down on your hard work making this video, but Colin Galens's work are similiar but more in depth and insightful i kind of disappointed this is not his video. Overall good job tho, just work on the content a bit more. The video is already beautiful look-wise
If you don't know what to do, what else can you do besides to keep thinking? Blaming yourself for not knowing something isn't gonna help. Look at other experiences you have, and look to connections to the new thing you're doing. Everything's connected.
@@bold3420 I mean, I get you guys, I genuinely think its good advice to practice (let's call them "Fundamental skills") first and then elaborate on more precise things. I just find it hard to find those Fundamental skills. Like, let's do a stupid example: learning how to be good at Call of Duty. You need to have good aim and positioning (Fundamental Skills) but if you are just starting and are a complete newbie you just don't identify these fundamentals, that's why I find it inefficient.
Like, I would really appreciate some sort of algorithm you guys may use because I personally don't find it easy to understand the fundamentals of certain disciplines. There are very broad areas where research is just not good enough.
By the way, your polymath video has a typo in it (Ploymath instead of polymath). I'm just telling you because it probably fucks with the metadata and is holding the video back.
Ty for shouting out Alex lab, mechanical engineering student and I love seeing my niche being mentioned. Also, poly mathy and engineering go hand and hand 🫶
@@Oraclehelp wondershare_edrawsoft 👈ins private message this account or update your contact email in the video description and let's talk about it in detail :)
One pattern I've noticed in learners: They learn to enjoy the process. They celebrate the small wins, feel good overcoming obstacles, and release the judgment of not being at the final destination.
If I didn't celebrate the wins of learning to draw simple shapes and shadows, I wouldn't be where I'm at in my art journey.
just a personal note,
World's shortest guide to LEARNING pretty much ANYTHING fast ua-cam.com/video/aBY6ZeC5RcY/v-deo.htmlsi=grMLny6E3bM-5TNK
1. overcome procrastination - just do it, try to do it for 5 minute
2. learning zone - synapses will always be made when learn things
3. implementation - don’t rush to learn new things, practice what you’ve learnt first to build memory muscle
4. passion - find exactly why you want to learn it and what you want to get
5. skills - break it down into smaller chunks of what’s most important and least, that way you’ll know which skills will help you in the long run, practice those so that you’ll improve in short time
6. take care of your environment - no distraction to prevent unfocused, misunderstood, half understood
thanks!
Thanks dude .
The most to-the-point channel on UA-cam!
ayy, thanks:)
I agree, indeed your on point UA-camr ✅
I like that tip about prioritizing and practicing the most important parts of a skill. That's why music teachers always tell you to practice your scales, because the vast majority of music is some form of a common scale.
Play your challenging piece at 50% slower tempo very precisely just before bed, the non-rem sleep phase will do the cleanup for you.
Chunking is also very important. Chunk the music piece bar by bar. Do rhythm first then melody
both great advice
Timestamps (Powered by Merlin AI)
00:04 - Exploring how a UA-camr excels in multiple diverse skills.
00:38 - Overcome procrastination to learn new skills effectively.
01:10 - Investing time creates a learning urge and enhances brain connectivity.
01:41 - Give your brain time to process new information for better retention.
02:11 - Develop a strong passion to fuel your learning journey.
02:38 - Break down skills into smaller, manageable chunks for effective learning.
03:10 - Prioritize key skills and optimize your learning environment for efficient practice.
03:38 - Eliminate distractions to improve focus and information retention.
I get it. My brother distracts me. That's why i locked him in the basement. Now i hear screaming every 5 hours but i will buy sound insulation materials and put them in front of the door. Thanks! :)
Are You Okay?
after few days the screams will stop
@@tmbthe1425 The screams stopped 11 days ago. I think he was drinking the leaked water, but he died of starvation. For now, no one asks what happened to him. I guess no one even noticed his absence.
@@ramazanmelih1250 in couple of years he will be a good Halloween decorations.
@ramazanmelih1250
Can't U think the Other solution instead of locking yr brother in basement?
Heard this would turn me into a prodigy
The value you provided in such short span of time is amazing
2:50 I thought the skillshare ad is coming up, especially when the music changed
Of the all how to learn videos, this is is literrally the best
The nicest, quick to the point and clearest vidoes out there, much love
This is really good sriptting and editing. Its not perfect but you can definitely see the passion in it.
Wow, thank you!
Mhm. Humans innately don't like learning stuff? Though I see where you might be coming from, I don't think that's quite right. As humans the way we think fundamentaly shaped by pattern seeking behaviour. That's why we like hearing music, or watching movies, or reading a good book, because it stimulates that need for receiving information. Similar thing with social media in modern times. It stimulates that fundamental drive to seek out new experiences, and it does it in excess, ergo, lots of dopamine, thus more positive reinforcement of doing that, and so on with that. I don't think procrastination occurs because we dislike new experiences, but when the fear of what might happen when we try is larger that the desire to try.
Humans are innately logical creatures. How could we not be? We simply interpret information and give a reaction accordingly. Now that doesn't mean our reactions always make sense, because what we know is never the full picture.
So I think it is important to recognize that any such "excuses" are in fact all fundamentally logical. Indeed, that is the hard part, because you need to realize why you fear doing it for all those very logical reasons, come to terms with them, and fully make yourself understand why you should act despite all that. We're all just people, we only act the best way we know how. Doesn't mean we're always right, and doesn't mean we can always forgive anything, but it means we need to understand that the things we know and experiences we have are always limited. Any change to how you act, must begin with a change to how you think. And to do that, you must realize why you think the way you do first.
You mention that it is the brains fault. That that's why we make all em' excuses. But isn't that just as much an excuse as the ones you're blaming? That brain is us. Most of it might be subconscious, but the conscious merely emerges from that subconscious. There is no actual distinction beyond us not consciously being aware of all that happens subconsciously. In the end it is our fault. We could have acted differently. We could have just started doing it right away. But we didn't. And that's fine! Important thing is we learn from it. Doesn't mean we always have to instantly apply all that either. No, learning is a gradual process. As you understand things, your mind shifts towards patterns incorporating new experiences. With time, you come to understand the underlying patterns in them. Next time you learn things it'll be easier, because you already know those underlying patterns it's based on. If we understand the most fundamental nature of reality, everything else simply emerges from that.
So; you need to understand your apprehension towards doing things, why it's worth it despite the risks. You should not blindly do stuff just because the reward is great, but because the potential reward is greater than the risk. You should not get rid of your awareness of the risks, or of distractions, but learn to act despite them. Because otherwise you're just fooling yourself. You can never get rid of all distractions, nor should you, because just the potential reward itself can, at times, be a distraction. Similarly, blindly following the rewards without further awareness of why you desire it or of the fact that it was always just your best guess of how it would turn out, inevitably leads to disappointment, because regardless of wether you want it or not it did not fit your expectations. Thus, there will be negative reinforcement and you will further dislike doing new stuff in the future. Awareness is key. Know yourself, know your ills and your wells, your faults and your skills, your fears and expectations. And if you truly do, there will be no need to procrastinate.
A kissing cousin of procrastination is something a little darker: envy. Go to the comments of anyone demonstrating skill accumulation and you'll inevitably find comments saying that anyone one could do it if only X, where X is having the time, having the money, being better looking, having more supportive family members, and so on. Watching a typical UA-cam video and complaining about it on social media probably consumes around 30 minutes. That's enough time to make progress on something. It's actually around the time of something called a perdomo timer, something people use for productivity and task management.
wow, nice observation
Overall a good summarized video, that touches on all key factors. But, the 1st factor, procrastination is a big hurdle in itself. I feel like that needs to be emphasized more, since that is the "make it or break it" point of starting any journey
Bro, ask indie devs, most single one of them can draw, model, program, write story... everything to make a video game on their own.
Wow! This is such a good, high-quality video. I'm really surprised that the channel only has 11.9K subscribers. You are highly underrated, my friend. The editing is fantastic and highly engaging. With the direction you're heading in, I'm certain that you will gain a larger and wider viewership. Keep it up!
comments like these keep me going:)
Great concept for a channel.
That was mid at best... It was more about habits then learning, talked about the very surface of chuncking and then hinted at flow. Go check out justin sung for learning how to learn. Although there is better people then sung, he is the most popular in the subject.
learning a new skill is as simple as making a new habit.
@lBaZeRl no it is not.
@@graysaco9781 try it out for yourself then
can u pls explain @@graysaco9781
who's better than justin?
Amazing video man
wow i learnt nthg new, maybe this where I shld stop binging productivity shiit
Staying to the point... I like it
So ... take breaks and put your phone in airplane mode. What a shock!
thanks you
Did someone say guitar? That's me. You can have my neoclassical impromptu exercises, they will make you better
You deserve more views
Love the content!!
how about u do the world shortest guide to learn video editing 🥰
in essence, in essence, wow! thanks
loved this video!
❤
Do you have a source for the claim that learning new things activates the stress centers of your brain?, I would like to read more about that.
check out the book "The First 20 Hours" I haven't read it, but it talks about learning and you will definetly benefit from it a ton.
"Or taking away your younger brother" is so real- (sorry mom)
On point)
Thumbnail looks like Colin Galen's thumbnail lmao
Loving the content, but I can't watch the screen with the static effect on the screen. Other than that, great video!
I thought this was Colin Galen... The thumbnail are way too similiar.
Not to bash down on your hard work making this video, but Colin Galens's work are similiar but more in depth and insightful i kind of disappointed this is not his video.
Overall good job tho, just work on the content a bit more. The video is already beautiful look-wise
Same haha, I thought he started uploading again
How do you know which skills are the most important if you don't have all the experience to say how the discipline works?
By research. For example, if you're learning guitar you can look up online which is the most important skills for it and learn them.
If you don't know what to do, what else can you do besides to keep thinking? Blaming yourself for not knowing something isn't gonna help.
Look at other experiences you have, and look to connections to the new thing you're doing. Everything's connected.
You can also break things down by yourself. The "less important skills" are build on important skills.
@@bold3420 I mean, I get you guys, I genuinely think its good advice to practice (let's call them "Fundamental skills") first and then elaborate on more precise things. I just find it hard to find those Fundamental skills. Like, let's do a stupid example: learning how to be good at Call of Duty. You need to have good aim and positioning (Fundamental Skills) but if you are just starting and are a complete newbie you just don't identify these fundamentals, that's why I find it inefficient.
Like, I would really appreciate some sort of algorithm you guys may use because I personally don't find it easy to understand the fundamentals of certain disciplines. There are very broad areas where research is just not good enough.
By the way, your polymath video has a typo in it (Ploymath instead of polymath). I'm just telling you because it probably fucks with the metadata and is holding the video back.
I'd be pretty dissapointed in the youtube algorithm if that was all it took to hold it up lol-.
indo???
nice, hope I won't forget it (I will)
(not hate comment)
Orang Indo ya bang?😅
iya anjir gw juga bingung pas liat bahasa dibukunya, tapi pas gw cek info channelnya katanya tinggal di US
Ty for shouting out Alex lab, mechanical engineering student and I love seeing my niche being mentioned. Also, poly mathy and engineering go hand and hand 🫶
Hi ! Love your content ! Interested in collab? :)
how does that work?
@@Oraclehelp wondershare_edrawsoft 👈ins private message this account or update your contact email in the video description and let's talk about it in detail :)
@@Oraclehelp check your email box.Lets talk further :)
@@WondershareEdrawsoft done:)