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  • Mental strength, in the context of this video, is the ability to overcome a psychological

  • stressor, such as the loss of a job or the death of a loved one.

  • And I'm going to explain it in a way that you've probably never heard of before.

  • I'm going to use words that sound familiar, like memory and strength, but these words

  • aren't going to have the same definitions as they do in the dictionary.

  • To really understand what I'm saying, you have to approach this video with an open and

  • philosophical mindset.

  • With that said, let's get into it.

  • One of my main arguments is that physical and mental strength work the same way.

  • Physical strength is our ability to deal with a physical stressor, such as lifting a heavy

  • weight or performing a sudden sprint.

  • Mental strength, on the other hand, is our ability to deal with psychological stresses.

  • So you can think about strength like this.

  • Imagine a circle on a line.

  • The circle is you, and the line represents a state of balance.

  • Now let's say something stressful happens, either you lose a job or lift a heavy weight.

  • In other words, you encounter a stressor.

  • We can indicate the magnitude of a stressor with the size of the arrowthe bigger the

  • arrow, the bigger the stressor.

  • And the bigger the stressor, the further you move away from the line (or the more you're

  • knocked off balance).

  • Your strength then is a measure of how far you can move away from this line and still

  • recover.

  • And building strength, whether physical or mental, is about improving your ability to

  • recover from greater states of stress.

  • So where does strength come from?

  • Your current strength is a function of your memory, but be careful, I'm using memory

  • in a different way here than you might be used to.

  • Your physical strength for example, how much weight you can lift or how far you can run,

  • is a byproduct of the weights you've lifted, or the distances you've run, in the past.

  • Your current strength is a function of the stressors you did or didn't overcome in

  • the past.

  • Mental strength works in the same way.

  • If you've done a lot of public speaking in the past, it might be really easy for you

  • now, and you feel very little stress doing it.

  • That's because you've become someone who can easily lift that psychological weight.

  • You can think about memory like this.

  • Let's place me in the middle of the screen.

  • Right now I'm in a specific State of Memory.

  • What do I mean by that?

  • My eyes are damaged due to various factors such as the stress I place on them, my diet,

  • and my genetics.

  • I have a certain amount of muscle mass based on my DNA, how I use them, and what I eat.

  • I have certain values, ideas, and worldviews based on my experience with life.

  • In other words, I'm saying that I'm a collection of information, and I'm combining

  • all of this informationthe totality of my entire being, my hormone levels, eye strength,

  • muscle mass, cardiovascular health, so on and so forthinto a single term: Memory

  • State.

  • Let's call my current state Memory State 1.

  • Now imagine two circles, one on the left and a larger one on the right.

  • Let's call the one on the left Memory State 1 and the one on the right Memory State 2.

  • Both are a combination of physical and psychological memory.

  • Memory State 2, the larger circle on the right, is in a greater state of memory, and this

  • provides greater strength.

  • State 2 is where I have bigger muscles, a better cardiovascular system, or a more powerful

  • worldview that helps me deal with the difficulties of life.

  • So how do we go from State 1 to State 2?

  • Obviously, if the circle is growing, something is being added.

  • Well, what's being added?

  • I believe it's knowledge.

  • But what is knowledge?

  • Knowledge is a special type of information.

  • There's a lot of different kinds of information in the universe, perhaps even infinite.

  • You can find out how many species of bird there are in the world, or how many grains

  • of sand there are on a beach, but I wouldn't necessarily call any of that knowledge.

  • Knowledge, in the sense that I'm using it, improves your state of memory, improves your

  • strength, or in other words, knowledge helps you deal with stressors.

  • So where does knowledge come from?

  • I believe experience is the ground of knowledge, but what kind of experience produces the knowledge

  • I'm talking about (knowledge that gives you more strength)?

  • I believe the creative experience is the one that produces knowledge, or to use popular

  • terminology, turning chaos into order.

  • Let me demonstrate what I mean with an example.

  • Johnny begins lifting weights.

  • He's squatting 135lbs, which is a reasonably difficult weight for him.

  • It's not easy to the point where it will have no effect, but it's not so heavy that

  • it'll injure him.

  • So Johnny definitely feels some fear in trying to lift the weight.

  • He knows he'll struggle with it.

  • And in fact, the last few reps, the most difficult and the most fear-inducing, will be the most

  • transformative ones.

  • The last few reps will introduce the most chaos, the most potential for transformation,

  • into his system.

  • But once the chaos is introduced, it needs to be transformed into order.

  • One of the main ways we deal with internal chaos is diet.

  • When Johnny eats an adequate amount of protein, the chaos turns into order, the potential

  • for transformation is actualized, his muscles grow, and the weight begins to feel lighter.

  • So here's what the transformation looks like.

  • Johnny is in Memory State 1.

  • He introduces chaos into his system by lifting heavy weights.

  • He turns this chaos into order, into knowledge, by eating a proper diet.

  • Now he's in Memory State 2, a greater state of memory with greater strength.

  • So that's physical strength, but what about mental?

  • Mental strength works the same way, but instead of a physical weight, we lift a psychological

  • one.

  • Psychological weights, such as the loss of a job, introduce chaos into our system.

  • How do we turn this chaos into order?

  • By constructing a worldview.

  • And just as some people don't prepare their own food, many people don't construct their

  • own worldview.

  • This is where literature, art, philosophy, pop culture, and religion come into play.

  • They aid us in building worldviews and dealing with psychological weights.

  • Even talking about our problems with friends is a way of constructing worldview.

  • We often look to them for another perspective or a new way of seeing.

  • Mental strength is best summarized by this Nietzschean quote: “If we have our own 'why'

  • of life we shall get along with almost any 'how'.”

  • Mental strength comes from being able to construct therewhy's” for ourselves.

  • One of my favourite ways to build mental strength is by reading literature.

  • I recently finished The Brothers Karamazov by Dostoevsky, and one thing he does in that

  • novel, which I believe all great writers do, is make you look at difficult things you don't

  • want to look at.

  • He introduces the problem of evil so well in that book that it creates a lot of disorder

  • inside of you.

  • But by the end, at least for me, he was somehow able to turn that disorder into order, into

  • a new worldview, transforming me as a person.

  • Reading literature, at its best, is like lifting a heavy weight and eating a proper diet at

  • the same timeit strengthens your mind.

  • But just as one should take responsibility over their diet to meet their physical needs,

  • one should take responsibility over their intellectual diet to meet their psychological

  • needs.

  • So here's a summary.

  • Strength comes from our State of Memory.

  • Our State of Memory is enhanced by new Knowledge.

  • New Knowledge comes from the Experience of turning Chaos into Order.

  • And chaos enters our system when we encounter a stressor, and turning chaos into order is

  • often a matter of diet or nutrition, whether that be our physical diet or our intellectual

  • one.

  • Another way to say all of this, a more visceral way, is that strength comes from conquering

  • fear.

  • Or more poetically, strength comes from creating comfort where we once felt danger, peace where

  • there was once war, or light where there was once darkness.

Mental strength, in the context of this video, is the ability to overcome a psychological

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