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How To Hack Into Your Flow State And Quintuple Your Productivity

4/30/2018

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Can being “in the zone” more often turn our good-enough into above-average work?
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BY STEPHANIE VOZZA 5 MINUTE READ
If you want to do more, learn more, and gain more, you might want to think like surfer.
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Surfing is a 1,000-year-old sport, and 20 years ago the biggest wave ever ridden was 25 feet. Today surfers push into waves 100 feet tall. Or consider snowboarding: In 1992, the biggest gap ever cleared was 40 feet; today that jump is 230 feet.

What’s behind the insane progress in adventure sports? Flow, says Steven Kotler, author of The Rise of Superman: Decoding the Science of Ultimate Human Performance.'

“Flow is an optimal state of consciousness, when you feel and perform your best,” he says. “It’s the moment of total absorption. Time speeds up or slows down like a freeze-frame effect. Mental and physical ability go through roof, and the brain takes in more information per second, processing it more deeply.”

Sometimes called “being in the zone,” flow isn’t just an experience for record-breaking athletes. “It’s ubiquitous,” says Kotler. “Anybody anywhere can apply the triggers for any task. And the amount of time someone spends in flow has a massive and powerful correlation to life satisfaction.”

Flow is an optimal state of consciousness . . . the brain takes in more information per second and processes it more deeply.

Kotler experienced the power of flow 17 years ago when he contracted Lyme disease and spent the better portion of three years in bed. “It was like having the worst flu crossed with paranoid schizophrenia,” he says. “I was functional about an hour a day. I couldn’t work. I was hallucinating. And I was going to kill myself because I felt like a burden.”

In the middle of what Kotler calls a “dark mess,” a friend showed up his door and demanded he go surfing with her. “Just to get her to shut up, I said, ‘Fuck it; help me to the car,’” he says. After about 30 seconds in the water, Kotler’s muscle memory kicked in, his senses heightened and he felt as if he had entered another dimension. He rode his first wave in years and then did it four more times. Out of the water, his life went back to its disabled state, so Kotler continued his trips to the beach, and over the course of six months went from 10% functionality to 80%.

“All I could think was, ‘What the hell is going on?’” he says. “More alarming to me was the fact that I’m trained as a science writer. I was having a quasi-mystical experience. I was pretty sure the [Lyme] disease had gone to my brain and that I was going to die at any moment.”

THE SCIENCE BEHIND FLOW
So, he embarked on quest to figure out what was happening and discovered 150 years of research on flow. “When a person is in a state of flow, all five potent neurochemicals massively amplify the immune system,” says Kotler.

“Stress-causing hormones are flushed out of body in flow, and the autoimmune and nervous systems go haywire. Flow brought me from seriously subpar back up to normal, and it can bring normal people to Superman.”

Flow is the most desirable state on earth, but it’s also the most elusive. The latest Gallup poll found that 71% of American workers are disengaged. “The average business person spends less than 5% of their day in flow. If you could increase that to 15%, overall workplace productivity would double,” says Kotler.

Adventure sports athletes are better at hacking the state of flow than anyone else in history, says Kotler, who focuses on this group in his book, identifying 17 flow triggers–three environmental, three internal, one creative, and 10 social. Athletes rely most on environmental triggers, says Kotler, and the same principles can be applied to business.

Here’s how you can hack into your state of flow to create incredible results:
TAKE MORE SOCIAL RISKS.
Flow follows focus, and taking risks drives focus into the now. For adventure athletes, risk can be serious injury or even death, but in the workplace it doesn’t have to be as extreme.

“The brain can’t tell the difference between physical consequences and emotional risk,” says Kotler. “Taking social risks is the same as physical risks.” Speak up at meetings, share creative ideas, approach a stranger or tell the truth when it feels awkward.

“In Silicon Valley, the idea is to fail fast or fail forward,” he says. “If you’re not giving employees space to fail, you’re not giving them space to risk. Move fast and break things. Engage in rapid experimentation. High consequences will drive flow and you get further faster.”

UP THE AMOUNT OF NOVELTY AND COMPLEXITY IN YOUR WORK ENVIRONMENT
The atmosphere around you can trigger flow, and Kotler says novelty, unpredictability, and complexity will get you there. “In surfing, no two waves are same,” he says.

In business, the idea is to get out of habits and routines. “Automatic pilot is efficient and routines save the brain energy, but it doesn’t put you into flow,” says Kotler. Instead, shake things up. Vary your route. Even brush your teeth with the wrong hand. Against-the-grain tricks will demand focus, says Kotler.

Pixar is a great example of a rich environment, says Kotler. Steve Jobs designed an atrium in the center of its offices, positioning the meeting rooms, cafeteria, mailboxes, and bathrooms around it.

“Steve Jobs artificially created the environmental conditions that massively upped the amount of novelty, unpredictability, and complexity in the environment because people across departments and disciplines started running into each other and having conversations,” says Kotler. “As a result, flow, innovation, and creativity went up.”

USE ALL OF YOUR SENSES.
The final external flow trigger happens when you pay attention with all sensory streams, listening, looking, smelling, tasting, and touching. Action and adventure sports demand deep embodiment, says Kotler. A kayaker, for example, pays attention to the environment with his whole body, becoming literally part of the flow of the world, says Kotler.

Montessori education is another example, promoting learning through doing and engaging multiple sensory streams. You can emulate its effect in the business world through whole body experiences and mindfulness. Kotler says meditation, balance, and agility training, and even video games will get you there.

“Flow shows up when we’re stretching, pushing our skills to the max,” says Kotler. “It’s an uncomfortable place to be in the moment, but the payoff is a deeper life satisfaction.”
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The Shot That Won The Open!

4/11/2018

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By Nick Lees​
I’m going to start by saying that of the sixty nine shots played by Jordan Spieth in the final round of the 146th open championship, the one I believe won it for him is probably not the one anyone else would pick!
 
The venue Royal Birkdale, the time 2.30pm, Sunday 23rd July and Jordan Spieth was starting his final round of the 2017 Open Championship.  He was heading the leaderboard at -11, three shots ahead of his nearest rival and final group partner, fellow American Matt Kutchar.
 
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Spieth was still a few days short of his twenty fourth birthday, already had two majors under his belt, had spent twenty six weeks as the world’s No.1 and was well known for his ability to lead from the front and close out tournaments.  Things certainly didn’t start out as anyone might have expected.  After the first four holes of the final round, Spieth had dropped three shots and was now back at -8, tied for the lead with Kuchar.
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​After twelve holes the situation was still the same, both tied for the lead of the oldest and most coveted of the four major championships.  All those who follow golf know what happened next. Spieth’s drive at the 13th went an incredible and almost unbelievable120 yards right, burying itself at the base of one of Royal Birkdale’s largest dunes.  This, my friends, is the shot that won the Open.
 
This is probably going to require a bit of explaining! My theory is based on the latest research into the peak performing zone or flow. Flow is the term first coined by Hungarian psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi in his book ‘Flow: The Psychology of Optimal Experience’ written in 1990.  Flow is an extremely potent response to external events and requires an extraordinary set of signals.  It is an altered state of awareness in which performance is powerfully enhanced.
 
There are many examples of the flow state in professional golf but my favourite is when Billy Mayfair shot 27 on the back nine in the final round of the Buick Open in 2001.  He was quoted as saying that the holes looked the size of bathtubs, it felt like another part of him had taken over and all he had to do was to keep out of his way!
 
As a golfer myself with a handicap of 7, I vividly remember my own experience of flow when I shot my first sub seventy round in a weekly club competition.  It lasted the whole round and I couldn’t stop smiling!
 
The flow state or zone is seen as something that just happens; that it can’t be planned.  People just find themselves in it.  But this is all changing... fast!
 
Since 1990 there has been a significant amount of research done on the flow state covering many aspects of peak performance in various sports, activities and industry/commerce, however for this article I just want to touch on the stages of flow and some triggers to flow.
 
Firstly, the flow state consists of four stages.


  1. Struggle, in which the conscious mind gets overloaded/overwhelmed with data.  Internal/external stimuli. Cortisol, adrenalin and norepinephrine flood the system causing tension and frustration.
  2. Release, where we need to let go of the struggle.  This is often best achieved by finding a distraction of some kind.  Powerful neurochemicals are released including dopamine and endorphins that replace the stress hormones and create relaxation.
  3. Flow, the altered state of awareness, an incredibly powerful cocktail of neurochemicals are produced which induce this altered state of awareness.  Our creativity/problem-solving abilities become heightened and our ability to achieve the impossible becomes possible!  In flow, we experience the paradox of control i.e. having control where we should have none and a sense of controlling the uncontrollable.
  4. Recovery, where serotonin and oxytocin are released helping us to return to our normal state of consciousness.

​Secondly, the triggers to flow primarily consist of external and internal triggers.
 
External triggers include:-


  1. Novelty (danger and opportunity).
  2. ​Unpredictability (you don’t know what’s going to happen next).
  3. Complexity (lots of information all at once).
  4. Deep embodiment (attempting to pay attention to all sensory inputs at once).​


​Internal triggers are those psychological strategies that drive attention into the ‘now’. 

The primary ones are clear goals, immediate feedback and challenge/skills ratio (this is when there is a specific relationship between the difficulty of the task and our ability to perform it. Spieth was clearly up to the task!  His skill level was high and the challenge level was clearly high!).
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So my belief is that Spieth’s drive at the 13th was the culmination of his struggle phase. Most players would have ended up with at least a double and their struggle would have continued.  Kuchar would have been two ahead and he would have ended up holding the claret jug aloft on the eighteenth green!  Spieth though, found a way to make a shift either consciously or unconsciously, paving the way to accessing his flow state.  And as we all know, what a flow state it was!  He took a one shot penalty and dropped on the practice range, three iron short right, chip to eight feet and holed the putt for a bogey.
 
The next four holes will go down in Open history. 14th par three, 6 iron from 195yds to 4ft, birdie.  15th par five, driver, three wood from 256yds to 55ft and one putt, eagle.  16th par four, driver, eight iron from 153yds to 25ft, one putt, birdie. 17th par five, driver, laid up with eight iron, chip to 8ft and one putt, birdie.
 
That, my friends, is one of the finest examples of the peak performing state in golf you are ever likely to see.  All triggered by the worst drive that Jordan Spieth has probably ever hit in his professional career.

Major institutions are currently conducting significant research into the flow state focusing on both sport and business. We are beginning to understand that flow is a product of radical neurochemical, neuroelectrical and neuroanatomical function.  It is being demonstrated that this peak performance state does not have to be something that is accessed purely by chance but that now it can be trained for. And that is an exciting prospect for anyone who wants to maximise his or her potential.
 

Flow Peak Performance Academy runs individual and group peak performance flow programs for sports and business organisations!  To find out more how accessing your peak performing flow state will help you, please contact Nick Lees at nick.lees@flowppa.com or +44 (0)7411 944284. ​
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    Nick Lees, Human Potential Expert. Helping you to feel your best, perform your best and to dare to achieve your wildest dreams.

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