If you browse through the interviews with some of the most successful people on Earth, you’ll find one common piece of advice shared by virtually all of them:
They never give up on their big goals.
Research shows that grit is a better predictor for success than any other factor. The ability to keep going despite setbacks is more important than your IQ, character or other external factors like your upbringing or surroundings.
But what does it really mean to “never give up”? What exactly is grit? How do you persevere when faced with larger than life difficulties? How do you keep going when you’re at the brink of exhaustion and all your hard work hasn’t been rewarded yet?
I wrote this book to explore the subject of persistence from a more scientific point of view than cliché self-help sayings. I want to share with you how exactly to stick to your goals according to peak performers and science – not vague motivational advice that assumes we have unlimited strength once we’re motivated enough.
Here are just a couple of things you will learn from the book:
- A crucial piece of advice you can learn from the first people who reached the South Pole. If you make the wrong choice, you’ll burn out – guaranteed.
- What famous American comic Jerry Seinfeld did in his early days of career to keep going. It’s a simple trick that provides huge results.
- What a study on top musicians, athletes, actors and chess players can teach you about achieving results and persistence. The elite performers practice much fewer hours than you believe.
- Five of the most common ways you lead yourself to self-sabotage. Usually, you’re not even aware of how many of your efforts go for naught simply because of the five things I discuss in this book.
- According to studies, this one trait is strongly associated with grit and persistence. Learn what it is and how to develop it in five different ways.
- Five focusing questions to keep going. Asking yourself these questions will help you boost your motivation when you’re at the brink of giving up.
- How listening to others whining makes a part of your brain shrink and affects your ability to persevere when faced with setbacks.
- Six bestselling authors and bloggers share their best techniques on how to keep going when you want to give up: Stephen Guise (author of “Mini Habits: Smaller Habits, Bigger Results”), Joel Runyon (blogger at ImpossibleHQ.com), Serena Star-Leonard (bestselling author of “How to Retire in 12 Months: Turning Passion into Profit”) Derek Doepker (bestselling author of “Why You’re Stuck”), Michal Stawicki (bestselling author of “Trickle-Down Mindset: The Missing Element in Your Personal Success”), and Hung Pham (bestselling author of “Break Through: 12 Powerful Steps to Destroy Your Mental Barriers and Achieve Success”).
There’s no reason why you should give up if you’re working on the right goal. Learn how to make sure you’ll reach your objectives. Scroll up and buy the book now.
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Martin Meadows is the pen name of an author who has dedicated his life to personal growth. He constantly reinvents himself by making drastic changes in his life. Over the years, he has: regularly fasted for over 40 hours, taught himself two foreign languages, lost over 30 pounds in 12 weeks, ran several businesses in various industries, took ice-cold showers and baths, lived on a small tropical island in a foreign country for several months, and wrote 400-page long novel's worth of short stories in one month.
Yet, self-torture is not his passion. Martin likes to test his boundaries to discover how far his comfort zone goes. His findings (based both on his personal experience and scientific studies) help him improve his life. If you're interested in pushing your limits and learning how to become the best version of yourself, you'll love Martin's works.
Need a pep talk to get you motivated to finish the goals you have set for yourself? I'm not 100% sure you will find that in this book. This book is a quick and very easy read. It will give you some basic tips and pointers to help you power through whatever it is that is stopping you from accomplishing your goals. Be prepared for basics, there isn't anything earth shattering (it is just over 100 pages so you can't expect much depth), but overall readers can walk away with a few tips that will help build a better understanding of what it takes to accomplish goals and what separates those who are successful from those who falter.
He brings up some good points (that will most likely serve as reminders to most readers) for example, the importance of establishing and maintaining routines in our lives in order to be as productive as possible. He also addresses the importance of resilience, being relentless, and common mistakes to avoid when trying to reach your goals.
I haven't read a lot of self help books on achieving goals- but I would guess that there are others out there that contain more action plan type steps that would be more helpful. This one was more of a nice reminder than a book that had a lot of helpful advice.
Concise collection of useful tips and techniques to be or become more persistent. Chapters have a little summary (=very useful). The book is not as repetitive as some comparable books; which also makes it a quick read. The author brags that he is a fast writer - and I feel that shows partially; not too bad, but another pass might mave made it a little more smoth. The way it is, it could also have been a longer blogpost...
I really enjoyed it and it was a great collection of some of the best resources. A good quick listen (got it on Audible) but the book would have been FAR stronger if he'd made it longer and developed his ideas. Instead it was more like a self-help term paper, though granted a VERY GOOD one.
I only paid like $5 for it and it's 90 minutes well spent.
Meh, might be more useful if you're looking for something business-related and suited to long-term strategies. I was looking for something that dealt with "in the moment" grit - keeping going on a long run, for example. Some interesting ideas, though.
Great self help book that covers the subject efficiently. Also contains actually applicable methods and ways to keep going when you feel that you want to quit (unlike other theoretical books). Would recommend.
This book is good for people who cannot stand reading for more than 5 minutes. The book was designed for you to finish the chapter in small portions and get the core of the message right away. No long stories and examples. The format of many chapters are in bullet form. It is easy to memorize. I cannot compare this with other books since this one has a specific audience. No intensive reading required.
Grit and resilience is such a key skill that we need to survive these days that compels me to read more and more about it to find out better and better ways of improving it.
In this version of Grit, Meadows not Duckworth, provides some down to earth and practical tips on how to get it by how to get there and learn it.
So get going, read this and you'll learn how to keep going.
A short guide to overcome your aalas(laziness) and adopt that hobby you always wanted to to. I found this perfect because it starts with one topic. Once you're finished, you have few questions. The next chapter answers those questions for you. I find this really motivating which helped me develop teo of my current hobbies.
This book provides practical tips on how to develop and maintain grit in one life's endeavors. it teaches us never to give up in this life. Ways to stay motivated in your low moments are also explained. plus some examples of people who came close to giving up but didn't. You might want to learn a few things from them too.
A good collection of pointers and practical directions to stay focused when one is trying to pursue a goal. Sliiightly platitude-y but i think it would never not be useful to have concise collection of good advice handy, all while being humble enough to actually seek some evergreen advice and refer back to it.
Some advice was pretty valuable but left me wanting more details or examples of how to execute them. Overall many parts worth highlighting to recap or review later.
This book is a must-read one. It goes right to the nitty-gritty of personal development, self-discipline, and mental toughness among others. It is very straightforward and realistic. I will definitely be reading this book over and over again.
After reading the 365 Disciplines, I got to read this as well and I love how straightforward and helpful Martin is. This book about grit is something that I look forward to incorporate in my daily life. It's not easy especially this time but I do not want to give up without a fight.
Short book. Most of the content is very straightforward. I love this type of book. Especially now, when we easily distracted by anything. So we can finish it in one go.