8. How can we use this most
powerful force in the universe
to work for us?Apart from
Financial Gains.
9. “The more you try to do and learn things, the more
you understand how things work and how to learn
better. These insights and reflections are your
compound learning,” writes Alexander Mistakidis.
The compounding principle can be applied to
learning.
10. Compounding the Power of Habit
Let’s say you commit to becoming 1% better at a specific task every day for a
single year. The implications of this small increase in commitment are enormous.
If you can get 1% better each day, the blue arrow
confirms you’ll end up almost 38 times better by
the end of the year.
11. Tiny habits – good or bad – make little difference on
any given day.
Only when you look back two, five or 10 years later does the value of good habits
– and the cost of bad ones – stare you in the face.
Author James Clear calls these “atomic habits.” They are each a tiny change, a
marginal gain, a 1% improvement. The difference is so slight that you may not
even notice it.
Like you saw in the previous slide how 1 % change each day for a year becomes 38 times.
It's Clear illustration of the long-term impact of these slight shifts in
direction.Compound Self-Improvement
13. The lesson is clear: Compounding reinforces what’s
already happening – whether good or bad. Over
time, tiny daily habits make an astonishing
difference.
It will make all the difference.
14. Battling Human Nature
Human nature conspires against us
when it comes to benefiting from
compounding.
Most of us succumb to the
temptation of instant gratification.
Our Brains have a hard time intuitively understanding
time,compounding and uncertainity
Do you run behind instant
gratification?