3 Ideas You Might Have Missed read time 2 minutes Welcome to the Curiosity Chronicle Week in Review—a quick roundup of this week's ideas to help you build a high-performing, healthy, and wealthy life. Week At A Glance: - Weekly Wisdom: Increase Your Recovery Speed
- Wednesday: Solomon's Paradox: Why You Can't Take Your Own Advice
- Friday: The Noise Bottleneck: The Subtle Trap of More Information
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Wisdom Worth Sharing: Major cheat code for life: Increase your recovery speed. You will get rejected. You will lose money. You will embarrass yourself. The goal isn't to avoid the fall. It's to shorten the time between the fall and the reset. Fast recovery compounds. (share to x/twitter!) Wednesday: Solomon's Paradox: Why You Can't Take Your Own Advice In the 10th century B.C., King Solomon was known the world around for his wisdom. He could settle impossible disputes with brilliant clarity. But that legendary wisdom regarding the affairs of others did not extend to his own life. King Solomon was great at giving advice, but bad at taking his own. As it turns out, this is a science-backed human phenomenon. Researchers found that people consistently reason more wisely about others' problems than their own. They named it Solomon's Paradox. The lesson? The wisdom you offer others is already inside you. You just need to create the space to access it. The next time you face a struggle, don't ask, "What should I do?" Ask, "What would I tell my best friend to do?" Then, take your own advice... (read the full piece here) Friday: The Noise Bottleneck: The Subtle Trap of More Information This is one of my favorite quotes: "If more information was the answer, then we'd all be billionaires with perfect abs." - Derek Sivers On Friday, I explored an idea from Nassim Taleb that explains why more information often makes you less informed, not more. Signal is meaningful and slow moving. Noise is constant and random. As you increase the frequency of observation, you dramatically increase the relative proportion of noise. Taleb calls this the Noise Bottleneck—the more data you consume, the less you actually know. The lesson? Your life will change when you stop looking for more information and start acting on what you already have. Remember: Dopamine from information gathering is a dangerous drug. Get your dopamine from action... (read the full piece here) Sahil Bloom | | |
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