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Exploring the Essential Features of “Ramit Sethi – Teach Yourself Anything”
Hi, I’m Ramit Sethi, the New York Times best-selling author and CEO of I Will Teach You To Be Rich and GrowthLab.
A few years ago, my friend and I were grabbing drinks in the East Village. “What have you been up to?” he asked as I pulled up a stool. I’d just come back from a museum tour after breakfast with some CEO friends.
He drank his beer. “You remind me of me when I was single.”
“Yeah?” I asked. I wasn’t sure what he meant.
“I used to do a bunch of interesting things around the city…but once you get in a relationship, it kinda changes.”
At the time, it felt good to hear. Yeah, I knew all the cool NYC things to do!
But a few years later, I found myself in exactly the same situation as my friend:
Same bars
Same conversations
Same weekend plans
In fact, when someone asked me “What’d you do this weekend?” my response was… “Nothing really.”
Or: “Same old.”
Or even worse: “Just worked.”
Oh god. Suddenly, I didn’t feel so cool. I was starting to realize how people get stuck in a rut.
(Also, how easy it is to bury yourself in work as an excuse, a shield against trying new things. “Sorry, I can’t go out tonight…I’m working.”)
I started wondering, “Is this it? Is this what I’m going to be doing for the rest of my life?” Already knowing exactly what I was going to do every weekend. Going out to beers once every couple weekends. Ho hum.
And it wasn’t just me. How many of us seem to “freeze” at 25 and stop trying anything new?
I remember something that comedian Aziz Ansari said in an interview with GQ:
At 21, I never wanted to be one of those “boring” adults who is all work and no play. But at 27, that’s exactly what I had become.
Which is when I took my head out of my ass and started looking around. I wanted to make NEW and INTERESTING a regular part of my life.
Only…I didn’t know how.
What do you do — Google “what hobbies should I do?”
Ask a friend? “Hey dude, I want to do something fun…any ideas?”
“Uhh…”
So there I was — ready to get out of my rut and ready to do something different. I just didn’t know how.
Damn, this 75-year-old lady is cool
You know the best way to figure out how to do something new?
Ask people who’ve already done it.
For example, one of my favorite things in the world is seeing an old person working out HARD. Like the 75-year-old woman who works out at my gym in NYC every week.
I LOVE IT!
I always wondered — what makes this woman come to the gym, hire a trainer, and learn how to squat…at 75 years old? What’s different about her vs. the 75-year-old who’s sitting at home watching Matlock?
And then I wondered:
Will I be cool enough to try new things 40 years from now?
It’s not just time. It’s not just money. When you’re in a rut, day by day, your world gets a little smaller. It’s very easy for your rut today to become your rut tomorrow… to become your rut 40 years from now.
But the people who keep doing cool stuff all the time — how do they do that? I wanted to find out, so I started asking…
- People with super-interesting lives. The people who have good jobs by day…and fly planes on the weekend, or compete in dance contests, or take up oil painting in the evenings.
- CEOs who have to learn tons of new skills fast. I knew CEOs who were running multimillion-dollar businesses…but who were also marathon runners or played in a band. How did they find the time? What did they know that I didn’t?
- Older people who are still active. My favorite. I love seeing older people taking cooking classes, learning how to use Instagram, or practicing new skills with their grandkids. Man, if they can do it, I can do it too.
Like I said, if you want to know how to do something, the best thing to do is to ask people who already do it.
So I did.
I talked to CEOs and a bunch of parents who always seemed to have time to learn new skills even when they were incredibly busy. How’d they do it?
I knew it wasn’t that they just had more free time. They actually had less time than most people. In some cases, almost no free time. And yet they still were able to try tons of new and interesting things every year and constantly add new skills and hobbies to their lives.
I also knew it wasn’t that they were just more motivated. Millions of people are very motivated to learn new things every New Year, but most people give up by March. I know I’ve done that in the past. These people I was talking to knew something else.
I kept asking questions and started to collect pieces of something deeper — a game being played that I hadn’t seen before. It was like they had “accidentally experimented” themselves into a life of learning more — and having more fun — in a month than most people have in a year.
When I probed, the most common answer they gave me was, “I’m just naturally curious! I like to try new things!” But I found out it goes deeper.
They’d built a “flywheel of interest” where they tried lots of things once. And if they didn’t like it, they felt perfectly fine moving on and trying something new. No guilt, no pressure.
They didn’t worry about becoming masters of everything. Being “good enough” was much more important.
In other words, they were playing an entirely different game than I had even known existed. And they were loving it!
They didn’t just focus on a single skill or hobby. Their success wasn’t just about taking a class on scuba diving or painting or any one random skill. They built fun and experimentation right into their lives. They had learned how to learn.
I started to apply these principles to my life. Look what happened.
But all those rationales fell apart when I started learning.
I saw I had never taken the time to really focus on the process of learning. I hadn’t thought about how I learned new skills or how I could try lots of things and not worry about becoming an “expert” at everything.
Now that I knew how to learn fast, it opened up all kinds of doors. I could decide the kind of person I wanted to be.
Not many people talk about the process of learning how to learn. But I think it’s one of the most important skills we can master. It completely changed my life.
Here’s what I learned.
6 reasons why you should be learning at least 5 new skills a year
6. Learning how to learn is a superpower that accelerates everything you do
Once you master the game of learning new skills, you’ll discover you can add new skills and talents to your life faster than you thought possible.
Instead of…
- Learning a lot in school and then never learning anything else (what most people do)
- Or learning one new skill every couple of years (what “ambitious” people do)
- You can learn new skills and try new things every month, even every week (what the top learners are doing)
Every accomplishment in our lives is built on the skills we develop. The faster you can add new skills, the more you can accomplish.
5. What’s your answer to “What’d you do this weekend?”
Other people: “Nothing” or “Hung out, mostly.”
You: Instead of the usual boring response, you’ll always have something fun and interesting to share:
- “I learned how to juggle.”
- “I figured out how to edit movies on my iPhone.”
- “I took a Brazilian jiu-jitsu class.”
4. We’re not just talking about learning from boring lectures
Learning today isn’t just about a boring classroom. It can be amazingly fun. Here’s just a few of the ways I’ve learned new skills:
Enrolled in a defensive driving class taught by former Secret Service driving instructor
Took a Disney class on leadership
Wine tasting, which I promptly forgot the next day
Took a Columbia University class on corporate finance (even though I have accountants who work for me)
Traveled to Japan and learned about a traditional tea ceremony
Bouldering in SF
3. For 99% of skills, you don’t have to be a master
It’s surprisingly easy to get “good enough.”
Let’s take cooking. Sure, it takes years to become a master chef, but you can learn how to cook an amazing omelet in an hour. Is it a Michelin-starred omelet? No, of course not. But you can learn how to make a pretty damn good omelet in just a few hours — and use that for the rest of your life.
“Good enough” will change your life.
2. Fast-track your career
It’s shocking how closely people’s career paths follow their learning:
The people who advance the fastest in their careers are the ones who can quickly and easily add new skills that complement the talents they already have. Think about…
- The copywriter who improves her public speaking and marketing analytics know-how… so people start to pay more attention to her recommendations
- The engineer who learns how to communicate better with non-engineers… and helps cut scope creep in half
- The CEO who adds accounting chops as the complexity of the business grows… and can invest more profit into continued growth
By the way, when you talk to your boss about raises, be sure to mention all the new skills you’ve been learning — inside and outside of work. It shows the kind of employee you are.
1. And most important, learning new skills just makes life more FUN
Stop doing the same boring things over and over again. Fill your time with new and exciting interests. Meet new people who share your interests and try new things together.
When you do, you realize that what your life looks like today doesn’t need to define what it could look like tomorrow.
That freedom is the ultimate gift.
All you need to unlock it is one simple skill: learning how to learn.
Introducing…
Discover how the world’s greatest learners get “good enough” at any skill in less than 30 days, even if…
You’re busy with work or family obligations
You’ve struggled “sticking with it”
Even if you don’t know what you want to learn yet!
If you’ve tried to pick up new skills in the past but got frustrated with the vague, messy process…
If you’ve taken classes that didn’t measure up…or you didn’t stick with it…
If you’ve struggled to find the time to practice…
Or if you want a new hobby and just don’t know where to start…
Then Teach Yourself Anything will finally give you the precise, actionable system to explore and build any new skill into your everyday life — without adding commitments to your already busy life.
(We’ll even give you a list of cool things to do this weekend.)
I’m not going to ask you what you’re trying to learn this year. I’m going to ask you another question:
What did you learn last year?
What if you’d learned 5 amazing new skills last year? Then this year, and next year…
Where would you be? What kind of life would you have?
Teach Yourself Anything gives you the master key for radically speeding up how you learn ANY skill.
Not only will you learn my favorite learning strategies, I’ll introduce you to many of the experts who influenced how I approach learning.
In the course, you’ll learn…
The Magic of Being Good at a Lot of Things
30 Impressive Things You Can Learn Right Now
The 10,000 Hour Myth: Why You Can Pick Up Skills Much Faster Than You Think
The Effortless Expert: The Art of Learning Things In Your Spare Time
What’s Your Learning Personality?
One-Hour Learning: How to Pick Up New Skills Without Having to Go “All In”
How to Get Experts to Give You Advice — For Free
Designing for Laziness: How to Make Practice So Easy You Could Do It Every Day
How to Never Feel Embarrassed When Practicing in Front of People: The Secret 3-Word Phrase
Learning Teardown: Ramit Learns to Cook
The Exact Process I Used to Become World Class at Copywriting
Finding the Hidden Patterns: How to Compress 100s of Concepts into 5
The Overnight Makeover: The Art of Getting Brutally Honest Feedback
Learning “Sprints”: How to Get Better 3X Faster
The Drinking Game Technique: How to Make Practice Fun
Pick your format
Every lesson in Teach Yourself Anything comes in video, audio, and transcript formats
Truth and lies about what it takes to learn fast
What does it really take to learn a skill fast? How much do you need to practice? What’s essential and what’s a waste of time?
Teach Yourself Anything is an inside look at…
- How to dominate difficult learning curves by leveraging your own hidden psychological triggers
- One simple tweak that can overwrite 20 years of programming and install a brand new skill in less than
- 20 hours (with very minimal practice)
- Why we’re lazy — and how to work around our inherent laziness
- 4 simple questions that will break apart the successes of other people and isolate winning tactics you can use in your own life
- How to get quick, easy wins from otherwise big, intimidating goals — like learning to be funny, speaking Italian, or becoming a great public speaker
- The Personality Quiz: A simple, 10-minute exercise that can rapidly accelerate your ability to learn any skill
- My “one hour” rule that helps me learn 2x faster — I spent SIX MONTHS trying to learn the drums before I started using this
- How to identify amazing teachers…and skip the not-so-amazing ones
- The Drinking Game strategy for learning new languages fast
- Why it gets easier to talk yourself out of learning new skills as you get older — and why starting from scratch actually gives you a huge advantage
- The 4-word phrase I use to turn embarrassment into a strength
- How I distill new subjects down to their core principles — without reading thousands of books
- 3 ways to get brutally honest feedback so you can accelerate your progress in any skill
- The pre-persuasion elements you can embed in your environment to persuade yourself to stay focused
- The Stacking Technique: Use this to add 10 hours of learning time per month without changing up your daily routine
And that’s just a sample of the insights packed into this course.
A new approach to learning skills fast
There are countless frameworks and theories about learning out there.
But in my years of speaking to successful friends, building my own multimillion-dollar company, and expanding my life to be full of exciting new skills and experiences, I learned a few simple rules of thumb.
They are practical, easy to apply, and extremely powerful.
Best of all, they are FUN.
I don’t know about you, but I LOVE learning. I have a feeling that if you’ve read this far, you want to learn more, too.
I see it as a privilege that we get to learn anything we want.
In this course, I’ve collected the very best tools and frameworks for learning, along with specific stories about how I accelerated how quickly I can learn any new skill. You can apply these instantly to your work, your personal life, and your business.
These tools will help take you from zero to “good enough” — and help you learn skills fast. Aim for at least 5 per year. Even one of these lessons can speed up how quickly you pick up new skills.
Put them together and you have a complete roadmap for picking up and accelerating your progress in any skill. One you’ll be able to use for the rest of your life.
Please see the full list of alternative group-buy courses available here: https://lunacourse.com/shop/