
The Art of Learning & Living Life | Josh Waitzkin
Andrew Huberman
27 ene 2025
Mindsip insights from this episode:
Neutralize aggression by removing your defense
An opponent's attack can be neutralized by removing your own defense, as aggression often needs a defense to fuel it, a principle applicable from chess to martial arts.
Invest in outcomes to fuel growth through emotional investment
To truly benefit from the process, you must care enough about the outcome to be shattered by a loss, as this emotional investment is what fuels growth.
Train in transitions to enhance perceptual frames
True high-level art is found not in static positions but in the transitions between them, and training in this 'in-between' space develops more perceptual frames than your opponent.
Learn from others' mistakes through fire walking practice
Through a practice called 'fire walking,' you can use visualization and physiological priming to learn from another person's failures with the same intensity as if you experienced them yourself.
Identify critical question nightly for morning insights
End your day by intensely identifying your most critical question, then release it to your unconscious mind overnight and brainstorm on it first thing in the morning before any other input.
Master weaknesses by leveraging your strengths
Instead of directly confronting a weakness, you can learn to master it through the lens of your existing strengths, such as learning defense through the principles of aggression.
Achieve post-conscious mastery through self-awareness journey
True, lasting mastery involves moving from a state of naive, preconscious freedom through a tunnel of self-awareness and existential crisis to an integrated, post-conscious state of liberation.
Shed winning repertoire to foster continuous growth
To maintain dynamic quality and stay ahead, world champion grappler Marcelo Garcia would abandon his entire world-championship-winning repertoire the day after a victory to begin creating a new one.
Target core weaknesses in underdeveloped areas for growth
It is often more effective to address a core psychological weakness in an area of life where you are less developed, rather than in your professional domain where you have built up defenses.
More from
Andrew Huberman
Optimizing Workspace for Productivity, Focus & Creativity | Huberman Lab Essentials
Best Ways to Build Better Habits & Break Bad Ones | James Clear
Essentials: Micronutrients for Health & Longevity | Dr. Rhonda Patrick
Defining Healthy Masculinity & How to Build It | Terry Real
Essentials: How to Optimize Your Hormones for Health & Vitality | Dr. Kyle Gillett
You also might be interested in
This Brain Trick Feels Like Cheating (Do THIS)
This Is Why You Break Every New Year’s Resolution — And How To Finally Stop | Shadé Zahrai
Why Mental Illness Is a Metabolic Problem—and What That Means for Your Health | Dr. Chris Palmer
Mark Manson's No Bullsh*t Guide To Real Change In 2026
Your New Year’s Goals Won’t Work — Here’s What Will













