When I was younger I used to get beaten up every time I made a mistake.
I quickly learnt that making mistakes wasn’t a good thing.
As I got older and started working, I learnt about a guy called George Soros.
Ever heard of him ?
He’s one of the richest people in the world, and made $1billion on just one trade, in one afternoon…..
George Soros once said:
Once we realize that imperfect understanding is the human condition there is no shame in being wrong, only in failing to correct our mistakes.
It took a while for me to reconcile what I had learnt growing up with what George Soros was saying.
But as I’ve gotten older, I’ve finally understood the sheer magic of allowing yourself to make mistakes and admitting that they are a part of the process of whatever you want to be good at.
It’s easy to run away from mistakes though.
Pretend they never happened.
It takes courage to say what went wrong, what you could have done better.
It’s hard to take responsibility. But you have to.
After admitting your mistakes, if you are brave enough…..
Ask yourself these questions:
When do you make them?How can you prevent them?What systems can you put in place?
It all comes down to Cognitive Dissonance.
Cognitive Dissonance is just a complicated way to say that we have a hard time admitting to things that make us uncomfortable or don’t tie with our other beliefs.
Rather than re-examine our beliefs or try to re-interpret the world, we instead choose to ignore the facts around us.
Scott Adams
I’ve been guilty of this.
When I started investing, a stock would go against me, and I would get married to the position. My ego would get tied to my predictions. Soon I would start justifying the changing evidence while the stock headed down.
Cognitive dissonance occurs because we would rather think that we are great at what we do (even when things aren’t perfect), rather than admit that we might be wrong. It’s easier to say that other people just don’t get it.
Don’t forget what Richard Feynman said about the easiest person to fool.
The first principle is that you must not fool yourself — and you are the easiest person to fool
Prof. Carol Dweck has done decades worth of work on this.
This is what Prof. Dweck found about people who enjoy and learn from mistakes — something she calls; a growth mindset.
TED.com
According to Prof. Dweck, here are signs that you have a fixed mindset (don’t worry if this is you, we can change it):
Here’s how to get a growth mindset:
Charlie Munger said:
I never allow myself to have an opinion on anything that I don’t know the other side’s argument better than they do
Unfortunately on Wall Street there can be a lot of opinion without a lot of thought.
Maybe because we deal with numbers or because of how much people get paid, it’s easy to have this false sense of accuracy and security.
People sometimes say to themselves:
“I can’t be wrong, because I’m smart enough to be getting paid a million bucks for my views”.
This is how we blow ourselves up.
On every trade, every project, every advice — know that you are likely to be wrong. Try to find people with the opposite view and try to think about how you could be wrong.
The brain tries to explain the world using simple stories.Finance, Wall Street, Investing are all very complex, yet we are wired to see and believe simple stories.
We think these stories can explain the world.The risks come from putting these stories or thesis together on why to do something and then believing the story more than the data.
Do any of these stories sound familiar to you?
These were all simple narratives that came to define markets for long periods of time.
We know how these stories ended….
Beware of simple narratives.
What story are you telling yourself now?
Warren Buffett figured this trick out decades ago. It’s called compounding when it comes to investing, and marginal gains when it comes to systems and processes.
The idea is simple: Get progressively better every day.
Figure out how you can be 1% better in the most important areas of your life every day. If you can do that, this is what your life can look like:
The problem is that most people talk about success like its an event. We talk about being promoted, getting hired, getting paid a huge bonus as if they are events.
But the truth is that most of the significant things in your life or career are not stand alone events, but rather the sum of all the decisions when we chose to do things 1% better or 1% worse.
Aggregating these marginal gains makes a big difference.
Here are some ideas for you to try in your life that I guarantee will make you more successful.
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