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Barking Up the Wrong Tree - 2. Ch 1

Should we play it safe and do what we're told if we want to succeed? CIPA - Congenital insensitivity to pain - defect in SCN9A gene, person does not feel pain. One of the villains in "The Girl Who Played with Fire" has CIPA When are our weaknesses actually strengths? How many number-one high school performers go on to change the world, run the world, or impress the world? Zero They are not likely to be the future's visionaries.....they typically settle into the system instead of shaking it up. Academic grades correlate only loosely with intelligence. Standardized tests are better at measuring IQ. Grades are however an excellent predictor of self-discipline, conscientiousness, and the ability to comply with rules. Essentially we are rewarding conformity and the willingness to go along with the system. Schools reward generalists, there is little recognition of student passion or expertise. The real world, however, does the reverse. If you want to d...

Barking Up The Wrong Tree - 1. Introduction

What really produces success? What separates the extremely successful from the rest of us? Summary: The things that set you apart, the habits you may have tried to banish, the things you were taunted for in school, may ultimately grant you an unbeatable advantage. Details: Race Across America - toughest endurance event, tougher than Tour de France. It has no stages, the race does not stop. Jure Robic - has won 5 times, more than anyone else His edge was - his insanity! When he rode, he lost his mind, became paranoid, had tearful emotional breakdowns, saw cryptic meaning in the cracks on the street beneath him, would leap off his bike mid-race to engage in fistfights... with mailboxes. He saw his insanity as awkward and embarrassing but impossible to live without. As far back as the 1800s, Phillippe Tissie and August Bier noted that an unsound mind can help an athlete ignore pain and push their body beyond natural limits. Author has a blog: Barking Up the Wrong Tree. Please...

Barking Up the Wrong Tree - Contents

By Eric Barker Tag line - The surprising science behind why everything you know about success is (mostly) wrong Notable quotes: Nothing important comes with instructions (James Richardson) An ugly duckling can be a swan if it finds the right pond. What gives them their super powers also becomes their kryptonite When there's no clear path to follow, academic high achievers break down His advise to aspiring artists "you must give up everything else" Introduction - what really produces success? Ch 1 - Should we play it safe and do what we're told if we want to succeed? Ch 2 - Do nice guys finish last? Ch3 - Do quitters never win and winners never quit? Ch 4 - It's not what you know, it's who you know (unless it really is what you know) Ch 5 - Believe in yourself.....sometimes Ch 6 - Work, Work, Work.....or Work-Life Balance? Conclusion - what makes a successful life?

Introduction

Wouldn't it be nice if you could read one book a day? In a year you would have read 365 books. What if you could read 2 books a day? Imagine reading 730 books in a year!! And why are we not able to do this? You know what the problem with books is? Padding, fluff, noise, fillers.... whatever you want to call it, it is the stuff that authors use to rack up the page count. No fault to them, publishing is a game just like every other endeavor in our capitalistic economies. But fear no more, help is near. Now even you can read one, two, three or even five or more books a day! I'll help you. I'll do all the heavy lifting, and take all the padding out, and leave you with the main points that the author is trying to communicate. I'm not perfect, so my work will not be perfect either. But, it'll enable you to read a lot more books than you could ever imagine. You are welcome, pay me back by paying it forward. Enjoy!!