Wait...two years? What?!?
I love this detail.
For 99% of people, it's unfathomable to spend two years working on anything...let alone a single joke.
For Seinfeld, that's just what it means to work as a master comedian. And that's when it becomes clear why he appears to be so effortlessly funny on stage.
It's a perfect example of how masters play by a different set of rules.
When you start to pay attention, you'll notice this is true in all areas of life.
For example, one of the women on my team is friends with the former CEO of a $150 million/year company in San Francisco. She knew him before his success, and they're still friends now.
But, she says, he just seems like a very down to earth guy who happened to start an extremely successful business.
"He will call up to schedule play dates for the kids or just hang out for dinners… [I]t can be hard to run a big company, have family commitments, and still make time to hang out with your friends. We don't know how he fit everything in but we were amazed at how 'normal' he made it all seem."
While most people are scrambling to keep afloat, these people are achieving everything that others WISH they could. They get to the gym, attend their kids' school events, shop for groceries, eat dinner with the family and keep their SOs happy.
And they make it look effortless.
These people are strong, resilient, carefree. They "just do it." That's literally what I hear from all my friends who juggle exciting lives with demanding careers. "Yeah, I just do it."
Yesterday, I promised to share with you what it is that separates the men who carry hundreds of pounds through the Himalayas… from the rest of us. How do they do the seemingly impossible, while making it look effortless?
You see this in masters of all kinds — no matter what their craft.
You ask them about what they do, hoping to hear some brilliant strategy or tales of the struggle. Instead, you hear this over and over again: "Yeah, I just do it."
When the researchers studied the Sherpas in Nepal, they didn't find anything physically different between them and the visiting Western climbers.
However, they did note this: What's the Sherpas' secret for climbing hundreds of miles carrying hundreds of pounds on their backs? "They simply go. And they keep going."
In other words, they simply decide they're going to do it, and they get it done. They don't second guess, they don't stress, they just do it.
They aren't stronger. They aren't smarter. They aren't more gifted.
But they ARE in total control of their minds. They have a Mental Mastery that allows them to do what they need to do… what they want to do… without any of the hang-ups that would make other people get stuck.