This version is much better with the length and visualizations than the ones you were showing to privacy on stream, i love the simple paint visualizations Also like the quick in game application examples are good, and ofc the content itself is great
This is awesome content and I'm waiting for your channel to blow up! My only note/critique as a fellow coach would be that "do" is much stronger than "don't" when specifically building new habits (which you lightly touch on). Do is actionable while don't creates another layer of friction because you have to process your actions before acting.
So don't in the sense of commands is perfectly good because the caller is absorbing the first layer of awareness, but when it's time to build a habit by yourself you can turn a "don't eat cookies" into a "do eat celery sticks when you're hungry".
So if I understand right, when trying to change a bad habit of a teammate you'd go. "Come with us!" Instead of "Don't run away!"? And is it the same idea out of the game, or now that there's no urgency you can insist on the "Don't do that"?
@@DavidFelipeAlvaradoSalas The opposite! Don't is perfectly fine when giving commands in game because you are aware of a bad behavior your teammate is currently doing, but when it comes to building new habits outside of the game you are giving your teammates a clear target when you tell them to "do" a good behavior. This is because it's easier for humans to replace a bad habit with a new habit than to unlearn the bad one. Learning should be actionable, so in the example of "don't eat cookies" it's not actionable since it's essentially saying do nothing. "Do eat celery sticks when you're hungry" is replacing the cookie eating habit with another action. However, if you have forgotten the habit you're trying to build and have your hand halfway in the cookie jar, your mom/IGL could say "don't eat cookies!" since they've identified a bad habit that is happening in the moment.
I never realized the "I'm healing" comm as unhelpful, just never occurred to me. Thanks for enlightening me!
bro this is such a gaseous idea lmao, so creative
This is actually insanely good content. Keep it up!
i like
This version is much better with the length and visualizations than the ones you were showing to privacy on stream, i love the simple paint visualizations
Also like the quick in game application examples are good, and ofc the content itself is great
ty!
Let’s gooo!! You deserve more view !
This is awesome content and I'm waiting for your channel to blow up!
My only note/critique as a fellow coach would be that "do" is much stronger than "don't" when specifically building new habits (which you lightly touch on). Do is actionable while don't creates another layer of friction because you have to process your actions before acting.
So don't in the sense of commands is perfectly good because the caller is absorbing the first layer of awareness, but when it's time to build a habit by yourself you can turn a "don't eat cookies" into a "do eat celery sticks when you're hungry".
So if I understand right, when trying to change a bad habit of a teammate you'd go. "Come with us!" Instead of "Don't run away!"?
And is it the same idea out of the game, or now that there's no urgency you can insist on the "Don't do that"?
@@DavidFelipeAlvaradoSalas The opposite! Don't is perfectly fine when giving commands in game because you are aware of a bad behavior your teammate is currently doing, but when it comes to building new habits outside of the game you are giving your teammates a clear target when you tell them to "do" a good behavior. This is because it's easier for humans to replace a bad habit with a new habit than to unlearn the bad one.
Learning should be actionable, so in the example of "don't eat cookies" it's not actionable since it's essentially saying do nothing. "Do eat celery sticks when you're hungry" is replacing the cookie eating habit with another action. However, if you have forgotten the habit you're trying to build and have your hand halfway in the cookie jar, your mom/IGL could say "don't eat cookies!" since they've identified a bad habit that is happening in the moment.
Another banger
Great stuff as always. Such big knowledge in such a young man
Wait, I know you...
you are big fish
you are big daddy
dog