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Tóm tắt nội dung (trích từ tài liệu gốc): THE BIG IDEAS The Talent Code It's All About the Myelin Greatness Isn't Born. It's Grown. Here's How. The secret sauce to awesomeness. BY DANIEL COYLE � A BANTAM BOOK � 2009 � 246 PAGES Deep Practice "The idea that all skills grow by the same cellular mechanism seems strange and surprising because the skills are so dazzlingly varied. But then again, all of this How deeply are you practicing? planet's variety is built from shared, adaptive mechanism; evolution could have it no other way. Redwoods differ from roses but both grow through photosynthesis. Deep Practice Q & A Elephants differ from a

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THE BIG IDEAS                                       The Talent Code



It's All About the Myelin                                   Greatness Isn't Born. It's Grown. Here's How.



The secret sauce to awesomeness.                                  BY DANIEL COYLE � A BANTAM BOOK � 2009 � 246 PAGES



Deep Practice                                      "The idea that all skills grow by the same cellular mechanism seems strange and

                                                   surprising because the skills are so dazzlingly varied. But then again, all of this

How deeply are you practicing?                     planet's variety is built from shared, adaptive mechanism; evolution could have it

                                                   no other way. Redwoods differ from roses but both grow through photosynthesis.

Deep Practice Q & A                                Elephants differ from amoebas but both use the same cellular mechanism to

                                                   convert food into energy. Tennis players, singers, and painters don't seem to have

Get the low-down.                                  much in common but they all get better by gradually improving timing and speed

                                                   and accuracy, by honing neural circuitry, by obeying the rules of the talent code--

Muscles & Myelin                                   in short, by growing more myelin."



Time to grow!                                                                                                                 ~ Daniel Coyle from The Talent Code



Cosmic Dice                                   The sub-title of The Talent Code says it all: "Greatness Isn't Born. It's Grown. Here's How."



vs. Working hard.                             Fact is, Michael Jordan and Michelangelo weren't born great. They *created* their greatness.



Michelangelo & Myelin                         In this book, Daniel Coyle gives us a brilliant, fun, inspiring look at precisely how extraordinary

                                              performers became so extraordinary.

Hammering away.

                                              And, more importantly, how we can shape our own destinies (and that of our kids and loved ones

Baby Steps                                    and communities) through rockin' the three basic elements of the talent code: deep practice,

                                              ignition, and master coaching.

The royal road to skill.

                                              The book's extremely well-written and is packed with great stories and Big Ideas. I highly

Ignition & 4-Minute Miles                     recommend it if you're interested in tapping into your ultimate potential. I'm excited to share

                                              some of my favorite goodness with you in this Note.

Are you ignited?

                                              But, first, let's start with a look at what makes it all come together: the microscopic substance

It's Not Magic                                called myelin.



It's hard work.                               IT'S ALL ABOUT THE MYELIN



Toyota's Kaizen                               "The talent code is built on a revolutionary scientific discovery involving a neural insulator called

                                              myelin, which some neurologists now consider to be the holy grail of acquiring skill. Here's why.

= Corporate deep practice.                    Every human skill, whether it's playing baseball or playing Bach, is created by chains of nerve

                                              fibers carrying a tiny electrical impulse--basically, a signal traveling through a circuit. Myelin's

Action, Action, Action                        vital role is to wrap those nerve fibers the same way that rubber insulation wraps a copper wire,

                                              making the signal stronger and faster by preventing the electrical impulses from leaking out.

Neurosis is a fancy word for whining.         When we fire our circuits the right way--when we practice swinging that bat or playing that

                                              note--our myelin responds by wrapping layers of insulation around the neural circuit, each new

      "I have always maintained               layer adding a bit more skill and speed. The thicker the myelin gets, the better it insulates, and

that excepting fools, men did                 the faster and more accurate our movements and thoughts become."

 not differ much in intellect,

                                              Myelin. Myelin. Myelin.

  only in zeal and hard work."

                            ~ Charles Darwin  It's the secret sauce to awesomeness.



1                                             PhilosophersNotes | The Talent Code

                                                 And the book is all about helping us understand what goes into its creation.

                                                 So, how do we develop this myelin goodness?



        "To sum up: it's time to                 DEEP PRACTICE

           rewrite the maxim that

                                                 "Deep practice is built on a paradox: struggling in certain targeted ways--operating at the edges

   practice makes perfect. The                   of your ability, where you make mistakes--makes you smarter. Or to put it a slightly different

         truth is, practice makes                way, experiences where you're forced to slow down, make errors, and correct them--as you

          myelin, and myelin makes               would if you were walking up an ice-covered hill, slipping and stumbling as you go--end up

                                    perfect."    making you swift and graceful without you realizing it."



                                 ~ Daniel Coyle  Learning and mastery is all about engaging in activities that challenge us and move us out of our

                                                 comfort zone--not *so* much that we're out of control, but enough so that we're stretching as we

                                                 master a new skill. (Think of Tal Ben-Shahar's comfort-stretch-panic model we talk about in the

                                                 Note on Happier, for example.)



                                                 Deep practice. THAT's where it's at.



                                                 Unfortunately, most of us don't like to do things that don't come to us easily.



                                                 Especially with the New-Agey side of self-development, where there's this odd allergy to hard

                                                 work. It's as if things have to effortlessly (and immediately) "manifest" for us or we must not be

                                                 aligned with some magical force and therefore should give up. (Weird.)



                                                 Fact is, as Robert Bjork, the chair of psychology at UCLA tells us: "We think of effortless

                                                 performance as desirable, but it's really a terrible way to learn."



                                                 I like to think of it this way: Effortless performance is breath-taking to watch. But a master only

                                                 gets to that point through effortful, challenging, deep practice.



                                                 How `bout you? Are you challenging yourself in your life?



                                                 Whether that means practicing being more authentic in your conversations or stretching

                                                 yourself creatively, let's put in some more deep practice!!



      "As Dr. George Bartzokis,                  SOME DEEP PRACTICE Q & A

         a UCLA neurologist and

                                                 "Q: Why is targeted, mistake-focused practice so effective?

       myelin researcher, put it:                A: Because the best way to build a good circuit is to fire it, attend to mistakes, then fire it again,

    "All skills, all language, all               over and over. Struggle is not an option. It's a biological requirement.

   musical, all movements, are

    made of living circuits, and                 Q: Why are passion and persistence key ingredients of talent?

   all circuits grow according                   A: Because wrapping myelin around a big circuit requires energy and time. If you don't love it,

                                                 you'll never work hard enough to be great.

                  to certain rules.""

                                                 Q: What's the best way to get to Carnegie Hall?

                               ~ Daniel Coyle    A: Go straight down Myelin Street."



                                                 Love this line: "Struggle is not an option. It's a biological requirement."



                                                 Just as muscles are only developed through what's known as the training effect (where

                                                 you "overload" your muscles, which "overcompensate" and make you stronger over time),

                                                 myelination (and therefore skill development), only occurs when we put ourselves at our current

                                                 edge of competence and put in the deliberate, deep practice.



                                                 So, if you're looking to reach the top of your field, remember the path is clear: Head straight

                                                 down Myelin Street. :)



2                                                PhilosophersNotes | The Talent Code

     "Skill is insulation that             MUSCLES & MYELIN

 wraps neural circuits and

grows according to certain                 "On one level, the study of myelin sounds like an exotic new neuroscience. But on another level,

                                           myelin is similar to another evolution-built mechanism you use every day: muscles. If you use

                                signals."  your muscles a certain way--by trying hard to lift things you can barely lift--those muscles will

                                           respond by getting stronger. If you fire your skill circuits the right way--by trying hard to do

                           ~ Daniel Coyle  things you can barely do, in deep practice--then your skill circuits will respond by getting faster

                                           and more fluent."



                                           Love that. We just mentioned "the training effect" and have talked about it a few times

                                           throughout these Notes, but it's a Big Idea worth repeating--especially as we wrap our brains

                                           around this whole myelination thing--so let's take a quick peek again.



                                           The essence: If you want stronger muscles, first you've gotta "Overload" them--you need to lift

                                           more weight or run a little faster/further than you're currently comfortable lifting/running. Not

                                           TOO much or you'll injure yourself, but a bit out of your comfort zone and into your stretch zone

                                           so you're challenged and properly overloaded.



                                           Now, your body doesn't like to get it's butt kicked and it basically says, "OK. Apparently you

                                           want me to be able to lift that weight/run that mile. Got it. We'll get to work to make sure next

                                           time it's easier for you."



                                           That response is called "Overcompensating." Your body overcompensates to the demands you

                                           just put on it by strengthening your muscles/heart/lungs/whatever needs to be stronger for you

                                           to perform at your new level.



                                           This training effect process of overloading and overcompensating is basically how ALL growth

                                           occurs--from muscles to myelin.



                                           And, it shows up in all aspects of our lives--from the gym where we're getting stronger, the office

                                           where we're developing a strategy for our business and the dining room where we're having

                                           more loving, authentic conversations with our family.



                                           So, here's to embracing the training effect in all aspects of our lives! :)



    "They each took part in                COSMIC DICE & WORKING HARD

  the greatest work of art

anyone can construct: the                  "For the last few hundred years, Western culture has understood and explained talent using the

architecture of their own                  idea of unique identity--the tumble of cosmic dice that makes everyone different, and a few lucky

                                           people special. According to that way of thinking, the Bront�s and the Z-Boys succeeded because

                                 talent."  they were exceptional--mysteriously gifted outsiders, destiny-kissed Kids from Nowhere. Seen

                                           through the lens of deep practice, however, the story flips. Uniqueness still matters, but its

                           ~ Daniel Coyle  significance resides in the way the Bront�s and the Z-Boys do the things necessary to build their

                                           remarkable skills: firing the right signals, honing circuits, making tiny books and filling them

                                           with childish stories, searching out empty swimming pools so that they can spend hours riding

                                           and falling inside them. The truth is, plenty of other Yorkshire girls had lives just as parochial

                                           and constricted as the Bront�s', just as plenty of other Los Angeles kids were as edgy and cool as

                                           the Z-Boys. But myelin doesn't care who you are. It only cares about what you do."



                                           One of the main ideas of this book and the others that are dispelling the myth that genius is

                                           made not born, is the fact (yes, it's a fact), that when you scratch the surface of the great people

                                           we admire, you see an EXTRAORDINARY amount of effort put into their craft.



                                           The Bront� sisters, for example, wrote an *incredible* number of stories growing up--constantly

                                           "practicing" what would become their trade.



                                           Let's look at another brilliant guy who most people think was born a genius: Michelangelo.



PhilosophersNotes | The Talent Code        3

   "Education is not the filling                 MICHELANGELO & MYELIN

   of a pot but the lighting of

                                                 "Consider Michelangelo. From ages six to ten he lived with a stonecutter and his family, learning

                                       a fire."  how to handle a hammer and chisel before he could even write. After a brief, unhappy attempt

                                  ~ W.B. Yeats   at schooling, he apprenticed to the great Ghirlandaio. He worked on blockbuster commissions,

                                                 sketching, copying, and preparing frescoes in one of Florence's largest churches. He was then

            "A teacher is one who                taught by master sculptor Bertoldo and tutored by other luminaries at the home of Lorenzo

   makes himself progressively                   de' Medici, where Michelangelo lived until he was seventeen. He was a promising but little-

                                                 known artist until he produced the Piet� at age twenty-four. People called the Piet� pure genius,

                           unnecessary."         but its creator begged to differ. "If people knew how hard I had to work to gain my mastery,"

                       ~ Thomas Carruthers       Michelangelo said, "it would not seem so wonderful at all.""



                                                 What an awesome story. (The book is *packed* with great mini-biographies like this, btw. If you

                                                 find them fascinating, you'll love the book.)



                                                 And this reminds me of Eric Butterworth's story in his great book, Spiritual Economics (see

                                                 Notes) where he tells us: "The great piano virtuoso Paderewski was once playing before an

                                                 audience of the rich and the royal. After a brilliant performance, an elegant lady waxed

                                                 ecstatic over the great artist. She said, `Ah Maestro, you are a genius!' Paderewski tartly

                                                 replied, `Ah yes, madam, but before I was a genius I was a clod!' What he was saying was that

                                                 his present acclaim was not handed to him on a silver platter. He, too, was once a little boy

                                                 laboriously practicing his scales. And even at his peak, behind every brilliant performance

                                                 there were countless hours of practice and preparation."



                                                 You might notice a theme here: Behind every exceptional performer is a LOT of hard work. (And

                                                 a lot of well-laid myelin! :)



                    "Carol Dweck, the            BABY STEPS: THE ROYAL ROAD TO SKILL

      psychologist who studies

   motivation, likes to say that                 "Long story short: a few years ago a group of American and Norwegian researchers did a study

                                                 to see what made babies improve at walking. They discovered that the key factor wasn't height or

         all the world's parenting               weight or age or brain development or any other innate trait but rather (surprise!) the amount of

         advice can be distilled to              time they spent firing their circuits, trying to walk.



              two simple rules: pay              However well this finding might support our thesis, its real use is to paint a vivid picture of what

           attention to what your                deep practice feels like. It's the feeling, in short, of being a staggering baby, of intensely, clumsily

      children are fascinated by,                lurching toward a goal and toppling over. It's a wobbly, discomfiting sensation that any sensible

        and praise them for their                person would instinctively seek to avoid. Yet the longer the babies remained in that state--the

                                                 more willing they were to endure it, and to permit themselves to fail--the more myelin they built,

                                      effort."   and the more skill they earned. The staggering babies embody the deepest truth about deep

                                                 practice: to get good, it's helpful to be willing, even enthusiastic, about being bad. Baby steps are

                                 ~ Daniel Coyle  the royal road to skill."



                                                 That's AWESOME.



                                                 And love this line: "Baby steps are the royal road to skill."



                                                 We talk about this idea quite a bit. Here's how Dan Millman puts it in his great book, Body Mind

                                                 Mastery (see Notes): "If babies held the same tendency toward self-criticism as adults, they

                                                 might never learn to walk or talk. Can you imagine infants stomping, `Aarggh! Screwed up

                                                 again!' Fortunately, babies are free of self-criticism. They just keep practicing."



                                                 And here's how Louise Hay puts it in You Can Heal Your Life (see Notes): "When a little child

                                                 is learning to walk or talk, we encourage him and praise him for every tiny improvement he

                                                 makes. The child beams and eagerly tries to do better. Is this the way you encourage yourself

                                                 when you are learning something new? Or do you make it harder to learn because you tell

                                                 yourself that you are stupid or clumsy or a `failure'?"



4                                                PhilosophersNotes | The Talent Code

    "What ignited the process                  Baby steps. They're the royal road to skill.

            wasn't any innate skill

                                               IGNITION & 4-MINUTE MILES

        or gene. It was a small,

ephemeral, yet powerful idea:                  Coyle tells the story of Roger Bannister--the "skinny Oxford medical student" who, in 1954,

a vision of their ideal future                 became the first person to run a mile in less than four minutes. It's pretty well-known that

selves, a vision that oriented,                Bannister did what most physiologists and athletes thought was impossible as he accomplished

                                               what Sports Illustrated described as the single greatest athletic accomplishment of the 20th

       energized, and accelerated              century.

 progress, and that originated

                                               Coyle goes on to tell us: "Less well known is what happened in the weeks after Bannister's feat:

            in the outside world."             another runner, an Australian named John Landy, also broke the four-minute barrier. The next

                                               season a few more runners did too. Then they started breaking it in droves. Within three years

                               ~ Daniel Coyle  no fewer than seventeen runners had matched the greatest sporting accomplishment of the

                                               twentieth century. Nothing profound had changed. The track surfaces were the same, the genes

                                               were the same. To chalk it up to self-belief or positive thinking misses the point. The change

                                               didn't come from inside the athletes: they were responding to something outside them. The

                                               seventeen runners had received a clear signal--you can do this too--and the four-minute mark,

                                               once an insurmountable wall, was instantly recast as a stepping stone."



                                               That's awesome.



                                               And it's the lead-in to Coyle's description of the second element of the talent code: Ignition.



                                               As he says: "Where deep practice is all about staggering baby-steps, ignition is about the set of

                                               signals and subconscious forces that create our identity; the moments that lead us to say that is

                                               who I want to be."



                                               ... So, who do you want to be?



     "It turns out that self-                  IT'S NOT MAGIC

        discipline was twice as

                                               One of the people Coyle interviewed for the book was Linda Septien--a world-class singing

accurate as IQ in predicting                   teacher who's worked with performers like Jessica Simpson.

     the students' grade-point

                                   average."   Here's Coyle quoting her: "Everybody said Jessica was a Texas girl who'd been singing in her

                                               church choir. That's ridiculous--that girl worked to become the singer she was. They said

                              ~ Daniel Coyle   [American Idol winner] Kelly Clarkson was a waitress, like she never sang before. Waitress?

                                               Excuse me? Kelly Clarkson was a singer--we all knew Kelly Clarkson. She had training, and she

                                               worked her tail off like anybody else does. She didn't come from nowhere any more than Jessica

                                               came from nowhere. It's not magic, you know."



                                               It's not magic, you know. ;)



                                               TOYOTA'S KAIZEN = CORPORATE DEEP PRACTICE



                                               "Thirty years ago Toyota was a middling-size car company. Now it is the world's largest

                                               automaker. Most analysts attribute Toyota's success to its strategy of kaizen, which is Japanese

                                               for "continuous improvement" and which just as easily could be called corporate deep practice."



                                               The whole idea of "kaizen" has become enormously popular and we talk about it in a bunch of

                                               Notes, including the one on Marci Schimoff's Happy for No Reason where she says: "To make

                                               the quickest progress, you don't have to take huge leaps. You just have to take baby steps--and

                                               keep on taking them. In Japan, they call this approach kaizen, which literally translates as

                                               "continual improvement." Using kaizen, great and lasting success is achieved through small,

                                               consistent steps. It turns out that slow and steady is the best way to overcome your resistance

                                               to change."



                                               From now on, let's think of kaizen as the deep practice that gets our myelin rockin'!



PhilosophersNotes | The Talent Code            5

                                              ACTION, ACTION, ACTION



"Neurosis is just a high-class                "[Albert] Ellis, who went on to write dozens of books, built a straight-talk, action-oriented

 word for whining. The trouble                approach that challenged the Freudian model of examining childhood experience. "Neurosis is

                                              just a high-class word for whining," he said. "The trouble with most therapy is that it helps you

    with most therapy is that it              to feel better. But you don't get better. You have to back it up with action, action, action.""

   helps you to feel better. But

 you don't get better. You have               Love that. :) Coyle tells us that Ellis's approach, combined with that of Dr. Aaron Beck, became

                                              known as cognitive-behaviorial therapy--which we scientifically know is as effective as drugs in

        to back it up with action,            reducing depression, anxiety and other not-so-fun stuff.

                            action, action."



   ~ Dr. Albert Ellis                         At the heart of their model is practicing a new way of seeing the world and taking more effective

                                              actions in the face of our ickiness. We talk about it in our Note on Jonathan Haidt's *genius*

                                              The Happiness Hypothesis where he says: "Depressed people are caught in a feedback loop in

                                              which distorted thoughts cause negative feelings, which then distort thinking further. Beck's

                                              discovery is that you can break the cycle by changing the thoughts. A big part of cognitive

                                              therapy is training clients to catch their thoughts, write them down, name the distortions,

                                              and then find alternative and more accurate ways of thinking. Over many weeks, the client's

                                              anxiety or depression abates. Cognitive therapy works because it teaches the rider how to train

                                              the elephant rather than how to defeat it directly in an argument."



                                              As we know from that Note, Haidt tells us that we have an Elephant that needs to be re-trained.

                                              Coyle's model tells us how: It's all about deep practice ignited by a vision of what's possible

                                              fueled by passion and supported by strong teachers that enables us to re-wire our brains with

                                              myelin in all the right places.



                                              Here's to rockin' that!



   If you liked this Note,                    Brian Johnson,

   you'll probably like...                    Chief Philosopher



   The Happiness Hypothesis                   About the Author of "The Talent Code"

   Body Mind Mastery

   Spiritual Economics                        DANIEL COYLE

   Mastery

   Wooden                                                       Daniel Coyle is the author of the New York Times bestseller Lance Armstrong's

   Overachievement                                              War and Hardball: A Season in the Projects, and is a contributing editor for

                                                                Outside magazine. He lives with his wife and four children in Homer, Alaska,

                                                                where he coaches a rapidly improving Little League team.



                                              About the Author of This Note



                                              BRIAN JOHNSON



                                                                Brian Johnson loves helping people optimize their lives as he studies, embodies

                                                                and teaches the fundamentals of optimal living--integrating ancient wisdom

                                                                + modern science + common sense + virtue + mastery + fun. Learn more and

                                                                optimize your life at brianjohnson.me.



6                                                                      PhilosophersNotes | The Talent Code