Bonus Episode with Greg McKeown: Get to Know The Man Behind Essentialism and Effortless
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4.9 • 1.6K Ratings
🗓️ 5 May 2021
⏱️ 16 minutes
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Summary
If you’ve ever wished you could sit down and have a quick chat with the genius man who wrote the New York Times best-selling book Essentialism and now Effortless too, then you’re in for a real treat. Today Greg McKeown humors me with a few extra minutes of his time to share answers to YOUR questions submitted on Instagram, and a few random questions of mine too.
If you’ve read the book Essentialism, there’s a good chance it changed your life as it did mine. You probably went through your life and started eliminating everything that was not essential, and found freedom and joy in living your new life as an essentialist!
But what happens when everything left is actually still really important? What now? This is the question Greg McKeown asked himself after writing, speaking on, and teaching Essentialism for several years which led him to write his newest book, Effortless.
If you’re wondering how to get yourself out of a rut, how to move onto the next most important thing when it feels like everything is the most important thing, or how to not drown in all of the responsibilities life demands of you, Effortless is going to provide breakthrough clarity for you.
I’ve read this book and devoured its contents, and I am so very excited to share with you today my interview with my friend and mentor Greg McKeown on Effortless, a new way to live once you start asking yourself, “what if this could be easy?”
In this episode, you will hear:
- Essentialism is related to the big rocks theory where you put in the big rocks in a container first before putting in the small rocks and the sand so that they would all fit. But if you put in the sand and the small rocks first, before the big rocks, then nothing fits.
- The big rocks theory is a metaphor of putting your most important relationships first and the projects you feel most pulled towards doing.
- But what if you have too many big rocks in your life? You can either give up on something essential, or look for an alternative, easier path. Not because you're lazy, but it's a matter of necessity to find a different way to do things.
- The book, Effortless, is for high performers who feel on the edge of exhaustion.
- The 3 principles in living an effortless life: being in effortless state, creating effortless action, and effortless results
- One way of being effortless is by taking something you already enjoy doing, and linking it with something essential to you (ex. dinner with family). Make things easier so you have much more energy to just be together and not have that extra exhaustion on you.
- We often have a grudge to fulfill an emotional need that is not currently being met. But grudges don't deliver a satisfying return on our investment.
- What percentage of your emotional energy and mental energy do you feel has been absorbed by your grudges and your anger? Think of the productivity loss and the opportunity cost.
- Forgiveness is the ultimate productivity hack. Removing grudges will have a tremendous rebate.
- Keeping the commandments is a shortcut to happiness and so many things – results and fulfilling your mission in life. Life is full of struggles. But primary among the tests of life is whether we will trust Him.
- We need to unlearn all the ways we overthink, over exert, over complicate, overburden, over judge, over criticize – all of that too much.
Supporting Resources:
“Effortless: Make it Easier to Do What Matters Most” by Greg McKeown https://amzn.to/32ILx2o
Greg McKeown’s website https://gregmckeown.com/
Greg McKeown’s Podcast “What’s Essential” https://gregmckeown.com/podcast/
“Essentialism: The Disciplined Pursuit of Less” by Greg McKeown https://amzn.to/2QQMwL8
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | If you've ever wished you could sit down and have a quick chat with the genius man who wrote the New York Times bestselling book Essentialism and now effortless too, then you're in for a real treat. |
| 0:12.1 | Today, Greg McHughan humors me with a few extra minutes of his time to share answers to your questions submitted on Instagram and a few random questions of mine too. |
| 0:29.1 | So I've got Greg McEwen here and he has agreed to do just a little rapid fire Q&A with me |
| 0:35.4 | and just a little bonus episode with you guys. |
| 0:37.7 | So I thought this was a remarkably good question from someone named Tristan. |
| 0:43.8 | She said, any tips for a stay-at-home mom? |
| 0:46.4 | I feel like most people on his podcast have careers. |
| 0:49.5 | My job never ends. |
| 0:51.4 | Yeah, I'm going to build on that for just a second. |
| 0:56.9 | I was doing a live event recently with a group of people and I asked them, well, what's essential that you're underinvesting |
| 1:02.3 | in? One of the answers from one of the women was time to think. And that really was curious to me. |
| 1:10.0 | So we spent the next 15 minutes just working |
| 1:12.0 | with her. She's a mother of six children. And she just said literally, literally, she doesn't |
| 1:17.8 | have five minutes to herself. And I felt that. And the plot thickens a little bit because I was |
| 1:25.5 | recently talking to somebody and I shared that story |
| 1:28.4 | from an advice point of view. I said, well, what would you say to them? And their response, |
| 1:33.9 | the first response was, oh, I don't believe that. And that always made me gasp because it speaks |
| 1:41.6 | to the isolation that being a stay-at-home mother can produce. |
| 1:50.4 | Where it's not just the actual level one isolation, |
| 1:54.5 | which is that you are at home away from adults for either the entire day or almost the entire day and every day, |
| 2:03.8 | there's the, so there's that actual physical isolation. |
| 2:06.5 | But then I think there's this double isolation where you just feel like people don't |
... |
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