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  • One of the things we know about motivation is that were able to trigger those parts

  • of our neurology that are related to motivating us when we feel in control. And very frequently

  • this comes from making a choice. Something that allows us to assert ourselves into a

  • situation. One of the most fascinating examples of this is how the Marine Corps revamped basic

  • training. So about 15 years ago the Marine Corps found it was having this problem. They

  • were getting a bunch of recruits that were coming in who were completely unpracticed

  • at self-motivation. They essentially had never learned the skills of this. Now for the Marine

  • Corps this is a real problem because the Marines are kind of different from other branches

  • of the military. Theyre usually the first in and the last to leave. And so what they

  • need is they need real self-starters. People who know how to take the initiative. But the

  • recruits that are coming through the door at boot camp were just completely unpracticed

  • at this. Charles Krulak who is the head of the Marine Corps told me that a lot of these

  • recruits had never been on sports teams. They had never learned how to assert themselves.

  • They had never practiced self-motivation. So Krulak looked at the literature and he

  • found that there were a bunch of studies that said the most effective Marines are ones who

  • have learned an internal locus of control. We all have an internal or external locus

  • of control and what that means is it’s how we see the world whether we believe that we

  • have the ability to assert ourselves and control our destinies or whether we believe that the

  • things that happen around us determine whether were successful or not. Krulak wanted to

  • teach his recruits how to have an internal locus of control what in the Marines they

  • call a bias towards action. And so he redesigned root boot camp completely. Now when recruits

  • enter boot camp instead of learning discipline and learning how to follow orders which is

  • how most of us think about it, that’s the cliché. Instead theyre trained on making

  • decision after decision after decision. Taking control and serving themselves in ways that

  • maybe they didn’t even expect they would need to. At the end of boot camp is this thing

  • called the crucible. It’s a 56 hour obstacle course that every recruit has to complete

  • in order to become a Marine. And during the crucible what’s really interesting is some

  • of the obstacles can only be completed if you kind of disobey the orders youre hearing.

  • One of my favorites is this thing called Sergeant Timmerman’s Tank where you have to use these

  • ropes and logs to move across this big sand pit.

  • And youre told not to do anything unless you get a direct order from your platoon leader.

  • But the thing is everyone’s wearing gas masks. You can’t hear your platoon leader

  • and your platoon leader is wearing a gas mask. Whatever he shouts nobody can make out. The

  • only way to actually do the obstacle is if everyone pretends that theyre listening

  • to their platoon leader and sort of self-organizes on the fly. Now we don’t think of the Marines

  • and we don’t think of the military as some place that teaches us to be subversive. But

  • this is the biggest insight is that when people feel the subversive instinct, when they feel

  • this need to take control and assert themselves that’s when they learn how to generate self-motivation.

  • And the more that we can give that to kids or our coworkers, the more that we can encourage

  • it in ourself. That feeling that youre on the freeway and youre stuck in a traffic

  • jam and you want to just take that exit because it feels so good to be in control, that’s

  • where motivation comes from. So anyone can learn a bias towards action. In fact it’s

  • something that we can learn at any stage in life. One of my favorite studies about motivation

  • comes from this examination of how nursing homes work and why some people succeed in

  • nursing homes and other people sort of just get old and pass away. And what they found

  • is that the people who are most successful in a nursing home setting are the ones who

  • try to break the rules. So one of my favorite examples is that they were talking to a group

  • of nursing home residents in Santa Fe and they found that the people who lived the longest,

  • who sort of did best once they were in the nursing home was this group of seniors who

  • as soon as they got their meal tray from the cafeteria where the nursing home would tell

  • them you should have this to eat and that to eat they would trade among themselves and

  • kind of make their own meals. And they talked to this one guy and he said that he always

  • traded away his chocolate cake and that he actually loved chocolate cake. But that he

  • would rather eat a meal of his own creation than just placidly take what was being handed

  • to him. And that’s actually why he was successful in the nursing home is because people who

  • look for ways to prove to themselves that theyre in control whether theyre in

  • control of their own life or whether theyre in control of their own decisions, those are

  • the people who manage to motivate to exercise more and to keep up relationships with friends

  • and to partake in the community. This subversive instinct, if you can encourage that then you

  • learn how to self-motivate and it just pays these huge dividends in your life.

One of the things we know about motivation is that were able to trigger those parts

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B1 中級 美國腔

美國海軍陸戰隊為何被鼓勵違抗命令? (Why US Marines Are Being Encouraged to Disobey)

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    Max 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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