JJIIMM KKWWIIKK MMAAYY 1177,, 22001122 HEALINGWITHTHEMASTERS.COM Volume 9 | May 17, 2012 Host Guest Jennifer McLean Jim Kwik HEALINGWITHTHEMASTERS.COM Jennifer: Welcome, everyone, to Healing With The Masters. We have a wonderful guest tonight, but I want to remind us all about our mastery. That word has a lot of meanings, and we may think of masters as the wonderful guests that share their knowledge and experiences with us each week. We consider you to be the master, each of you in this audience, you the participant. No one knows you better than you, and no one is more uniquely qualified to transform your life than you. Today we will together discover the tools and techniques to move and shift your life into love and light and, in the process, truly make a difference on this beautiful planet of ours. Together we are a very powerful community. You matter. You can light up the world. Today we are so honored to welcome really an amazing master, a brilliant, brilliant person. I had the honor of meeting him recently at an event, and I immediately knew, “I’ve got to share this guy with you guys.” Jim Kwik, that is his real name, Kwik. He runs a company called Kwik Learning. Jim has taught speed‐reading, memory improvement, accelerated learning for over 18 years. Jim is the creator of the renowned Kwik Reading, Kwik Recall, and Kwik Thinking systems used in over 50 countries. His clients include Marriott Hotel, Million Dollar Roundtable, MetLife, Virgin, Harvard University and New York University. He is the curator and co‐founder of the Annual SuperheroYou Brainpower Conference, where he has the leaders of the planet there. He shared the speaking stage with global leaders, from Sir Richard Branson to the Dalai Lama. He has a passion for teaching others how to maximize their superpower brain, navigate information overwhelm and unlock their true genius so they can lead healthier and more fulfilling lives. Welcome, Jim Kwik, to Healing With The Masters. It’s really awesome and exciting to have you here. Jim: Thank you, Jennifer. I’ve been really looking forward to this. [Inaudible 00:02:10] Jennifer: It’s kind of cool, isn’t it? Jim: I love this. Jennifer: Yeah, and it’s fun how we met, that it was very coincidental, and the day before we had just had a cancellation. I’m looking at you going, “Oh, my God. I’ve got to show my audience what you do.” So what is it that you do, Jim? Seriously, did this incredible brain of yours just happen? Jennifer McLean’s Healing With The Masters: Vol. 9 Page 2 of 36 Guest: Jim Kwik May 17, 2012 Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Jennifer McLean | Healing With The Masters Jim: No. That would be the simple answer of it. People see, when I get to present, when I’d be honored to be able to share in front of audiences, I always open up with some kind of memory demonstration where I’ll pass around a mike, and 100 people will give me their names, or they’ll give me a list of random words or 100‐digit number, and I’ll memorize it on the spot. Afterwards I’ll tell people, “I don’t do this to impress you. I do this really to express to you what’s really possible.” These abilities are something that I literally learned myself. My inspiration was my desperation. When people hear that I used to read a book a day for four years or do these kind of things — at one point I couldn’t do any of these things. I didn’t wake up, or I wasn’t born in the hospital and crawl out to the waiting room and just start speed‐reading magazines or anything like that. I struggled, like many people do, over information overload. I wasn’t a genius going to an Ivy League school. I ended up going to a state university, and I ended up working really, really hard, probably much harder than I needed to, because I felt like I didn’t have the skills to really learn how to learn. That’s really been my life’s work, and my life’s work has been learning these systems and then teaching them with other people who could benefit and go through their own healing. But I went through quite a healing process in a crisis. Sometimes you have to have a breakdown to have a breakthrough. That’s my story. Jennifer: So you had a breakdown. So what brought you to this particular breakthrough, and how has it changed yours, and I know you’ve got lots of stories of other lives that it’s changed. Why do we need to have a great memory? Jim: Well, I think one of the things is — if you’re here, first of all, I want to say welcome, because as I was saying in the beginning, when we’re talking to people, I think one of the most valuable things that you have is your time. I don’t take that lightly. It’s the one thing — if somebody wants an hour of my time, they’d better have a great reason. I can’t get that back. So number one, thank you for being here, and I’m ready to play full‐out and give you everything I’ve got. How I got started on this was about two decades ago, when I got to college, I was very — since I was not a great student, I wanted to — I thought this would be a great place to get a fresh start. So I took a lot of courses, and it got even worse. Instead of being able to have a clean start, I just went through kind of an information overload, and because I needed to be able to keep up with my midterms or my papers and my tests, I wasn’t eating. I wasn’t sleeping. I wasn’t taking care of myself. The human body and mind can only go through that for so long, and so after not taking care of myself for literally weeks and weeks and pulling all these all‐nighters, I ended up passing out in public. I woke up in the hospital a day and a half later, hooked up to all these IVs, and I was not in any kind of condition. I woke up thinking, “There has to be a better way.” I don't know, as you’re listening to this, if you’ve ever had these kind of defining moments in your life, but I woke up thinking, “No more. I can’t possibly work any harder.” I looked for answers, and when I put that out there to the universe, the nurse actually walked in, true story, and she had a mug of tea to give me. On the mug was a drawing of a pretty smart Jennifer McLean’s Healing With The Masters: Vol. 9 Page 3 of 36 Guest: Jim Kwik May 17, 2012 Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Jennifer McLean | Healing With The Masters person, Albert Einstein, and it had a quote on there that said, “The same level of thinking that’s created the problem won’t solve the problem.” Jennifer: You are powerful, Jim Kwik, to create that in that very moment. Jim: I know. I believe these answers are always there. It’s just our reticular activating system, the part of our brain that makes us kind of be aware, it’s just not paying attention. I was hyperly aware, because even though I was unconscious for a day and a half out of sheer exhaustion, I feel like I was unconscious my whole entire life. Learning is so fundamental. In an age of technology, I think learning is the ultimate technology. If they say knowledge is power, I think then, learning is a superpower. So I vowed right at that moment, saying, “This won’t happen again, and I’m going to learn everything I can about this.” I said, “Where shall I start?” My immediate reaction was school, but then I quickly came to the conclusion that school never really taught me how to learn. They told me what to learn. Thinking back to school, you took classes on math and history and science and Spanish, but we weren’t always taught how to learn. There were no classes on memory. There were no classes on how to read faster, how to have better focus or concentration and presence or your litany skills or how to study. I think one of the challenges that we all face, when we’re talking about healing, is one of the crises we have is that we’re always inundated with this amount of information. Exponential technology has created this data explosion, and it’s rising. I read recently that the founder of Google said that the amount of information that has been created since the dawn of humanity to the year 2003 — think about all that information. That information now is created every two days online, every 48 hours. Jennifer: Oh, God. I just got tired. Jim: I know, and that’s the thing. Now they’re putting labels on this now. Back then I was just exhausted. I get to speak in front of a lot of healers and a lot of doctors, and they call it information anxiety, information fatigue syndrome. Jennifer: There’s actually a label for it now. Jim: Uh‐huh, and everything’s a syndrome right now, so information fatigue syndrome. So the symptoms of this, if you can relate to this, is higher levels of stress — that’s pretty obvious — higher blood pressure, compression of leisure time, meaning because of all this work, trying to keep up with everything, we have less free time, or if people have free time, they’re not enjoying it as much, because their mind is not present. It’s still multi‐tasking every which way, trying to check email and thinking about the bills and everything else. Also the sleeplessness, people aren’t getting enough sleep, and they’re not taking care of themselves. I would say, first, just to start off this call, because I want to treat this as a real training, I would say, right now, as you’re here, that this is time for you, and it’s time well‐ spent. I appreciate, and I respect you listening to this call live or as a replay, because you’re Jennifer McLean’s Healing With The Masters: Vol. 9 Page 4 of 36 Guest: Jim Kwik May 17, 2012 Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Jennifer McLean | Healing With The Masters doing something fantastic for yourself. Most people, I find, that are attracted to personal transformation or growth, sometimes they put themselves last. They’re always there for their family or their friends or their work, and they’re being pulled energetically in all these different directions, but they’re never kind of replenishing the well. So I always believe that in order to give — it’s really great, but you could be a martyr unless you’re kind of taking care of yourself. I think you need to grow in order to give more, and so I appreciate you being on this call. I would say, also, at the same time, play it full out. Be present. Know that we’re here having this conversation live, and know that you, what you put in is what you get out. Maybe turn off the phones and maybe close the doors and just be here and maybe even take some notes, because you never know what kind of ideas could really change your life and also change the world. I know, Jennifer, you attract some very powerful individuals that are attracted to your work, and they have the ability to have greater impact and greater influence. So my goal is — I love serving people who can serve other people. Jennifer: You’ve got the right audience here, because that is a catalyst, for sure, for the shift that we’re all experiencing right now on the planet. Jim: Yeah, and that’s what we need. The planet needs that. Jennifer: I meant to mention this, though, because Jim really does look at these kind of shows as a training. He’s actually serious. Go get and pen and a paper, because you’re probably going to want to write some notes here. Let’s dive into some of this stuff. You talk about the reticular activating system. First of all, what is that, and how do we make it work for us? Jim: Well, one of the big things that people have challenges with sometimes is this thing called focus. I know someone mentioned it on the call, saying, “It’s hard right now to be present when you’re reading something.” Have you ever read something, got to the end of the page and just forgot what you just read? Jennifer: Way too many times, especially now that I just turned 50. Jim: Happy birthday. Jennifer: Thank you. Jim: This is one of the things, where people who get attracted to our work are very sensitized to learning. They love learning, and they want to be avid learners through their entire life, and talk about the health benefits that come from it. Immediately when I kind of came to this realization, I left the hospital. I said, “I’m on a quest. I’m on a quest to solve a riddle, a riddle saying how do we learn. How does our brain work so we can work our brain?” People are always talking about this gift we have of our mind, this three‐pound matter of a brain between our ears that is a supercomputer. They call this the millennium of the mind, but they say we use 10 percent or 2 percent or ten‐thousandths of 1 percent, a very small amount of its real potential. Yet if we’re such geniuses, how come we struggle to — we meet Jennifer McLean’s Healing With The Masters: Vol. 9 Page 5 of 36 Guest: Jim Kwik May 17, 2012 Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Jennifer McLean | Healing With The Masters somebody, and we get their name, and we forget their name. How come we forget where we put the keys and where we parked the car? Have you ever lost your cell phone and found yourself calling your own cell phone, hoping you kept it on so it rings somewhere in the house, or you walk into a room of your own home, and you just forget why you’re there. Or you go to the grocery store to pick up one thing, and you come back with two bags of groceries, with everything but that one thing you needed to buy? How can that be? So I studied everything under the sun that I could get my hands on, having to do with learning, every book, tape. Went to every seminar on adult learning, multiple intelligences, different learning styles, speed‐reading, memory enhancement, and all of a sudden, my life started to get better. As my life improved, I started to get better grades in less time, and I couldn’t help but share this with other people. That’s been my quest in the past two decades. When we’re talking about focus, that’s been my focus, but I’ll give you a couple of keys. We’re talking about the reticular activating system and just the biology of the brain. A lot of people, if you have trouble focusing, I’ll tell you a couple of reasons why, going back to one of the initial questions people had early on, when they were talking about genetics. They were talking about what role does genetics or biology play to your potential, and according to different research — and I’m one of those kind of geeks, that I like to read all this stuff. I don’t want to keep it in an ivory tower. I really want to make it practical, but according to the research, about one‐third of your potential is genetic. It’s biological, and that includes all the challenges that people have, whether it’s the genetic aspect of what have you. We’re talking about nature. Two‐thirds has to do with — completely in your control, and that’s really your lifestyle. It’s how you’re using your brain. It’s what you’re feeding your brain. I call it my renewal lifestyle. Every letter stands for something. That’s really key for learning for me, but two‐thirds, I mean, that’s so exciting that two‐thirds of your potential is in your control. So when it comes to focus, if you have trouble focusing, let’s say — I like to get very practical. Let’s say you want to read more. Do you have a few books on your shelf that you haven’t read yet? I was listening to — I’ve been really enjoying this series and past series of Healing With The Masters, because these are the people that I learned from, people like Wayne, people like Gregg Braden. You read their books, but sometimes people go out, and they order their books, and it just sits on the shelf. As our friend Lisa talks about, it becomes shelf‐help instead of self‐help. That’s one of the challenges. Jennifer: Make it look really good and learn it. Jim: That’s one of the challenges people have. So what we’re talking about here is how do you read those books, because some people, they don’t want to read. They use reading — they read so painfully slow sometimes that they use reading as a sedative. A lot of people have that token book by their bed, that’s been there for weeks or months. It’s embarrassing, but they pick up the book just when they want to fall asleep. Jennifer McLean’s Healing With The Masters: Vol. 9 Page 6 of 36 Guest: Jim Kwik May 17, 2012 Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Jennifer McLean | Healing With The Masters How I relate this back to when we’re talking about the reticular activating system and your presence and your awareness and your focus is there’s a myth out there that, if I ask people to read faster, then what will happen to your comprehension? If I ask you to read twice as fast, what do you think will happen to your understanding of what you read? People would think it goes — Jennifer: Yeah, it feels like it would go down. Jim: It would go down, and in actuality — and I test thousands of people every single year across the country — we find that the fastest readers actually have the best comprehension overall, because they have the best focus. How I can relate that is it’s kind of like you have this supercomputer of a brain. It’s one of your most valuable assets, especially for training things, like wealth and health. You know the connection between brain and body, but when we read, we feed this supercomputer one — word — at — a — time. Jennifer: Stop it. Jim: I know, I know. When I talk like that, also, don’t you feel after a while, like if — I — talk — this — way — during — the — entire — conversation, automatically — first of all, the call would end up being five hours long, but then on top of that, people would naturally — what would happen? You would naturally look for entertainment elsewhere. That’s why a lot of people distract themselves, meaning some people read so painstakingly slow — if you don’t give your brain the stimulus it needs, it’ll seek entertainment elsewhere in the form of distraction. Jennifer: Wow, that’s fascinating. Jim: So if you have trouble — yeah. If your brain is all that powerful — people start using — when we’re talking about ego, they start getting ego‐gratification. They start bragging for how bad their memory is or how not smart they are. I always tell people, if they fight for their limitations, then they get to keep them. That’s the challenge. Here’s the thing, though. It’s not really your fault. If you’re frustrated or you’re forgetful or you’re overwhelmed — partly, it’s good to take responsibility, and I believe in that. But also, partly, our challenge is we all grew up in this 20th century education. The 20th century education, literally an assembly‐line education, because it was modeled around assembly lines, and the teachers were production managers. The production times were four years, four years, four years, and it was cookie‐cutter, and it was one‐size‐fits‐all. That model prepared us to work in factories and out on farms but certainly not in the age we live in now. We live in an age of jet planes and spacecrafts, but our vehicle of choice is like a horse and buggy. So when we’re reading, we want to be able to read faster, because we’ll be able to have better comprehension, because it’ll force us to have better focus. Here’s an example. If you’re driving a car just through your neighborhood, going to and fro work, maybe you’re going shopping, and you’re only going 20 or 30 miles an hour, are you really focused on this act called driving? Jennifer: Not really. Jennifer McLean’s Healing With The Masters: Vol. 9 Page 7 of 36 Guest: Jim Kwik May 17, 2012 Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Jennifer McLean | Healing With The Masters Jim: Not really, right? If you’re going only 20 miles an hour, you’re stuck in traffic, you’re not really thinking about it, because what are you doing? Your focus is where? You’re drinking your Starbucks. You’re texting, even though you shouldn’t. You’re thinking about the dry cleaning. You’re talking to someone in the backseat. You’re listening to the radio. You could be doing six different things when you’re only going 20, 30 miles an hour, but let’s say you’re racing cars. You’re in a racecar, and you’re taking hairpin turns at 110 miles an hour. Do you have more or less focus? Jennifer: You’re very hyper‐focused. Jim: A little bit or a lot more? A lot more. Jennifer: Just a tad more, like yes, like every single ounce of your being is in that moment. Jim: Exactly, and that’s the key to learning. You’re not thinking about the dry cleaning. You’re not trying to text your friends while you’re going that fast, because the speed forces you to focus in the present. That’s why, for example, learning — our whole philosophy around Kwik Learning is not actually where it’s so sped up you’re nervous. Actually it makes things easier, where information comes in at greater speeds but also greater heaves. It’s the difference between typing with two fingers and typing maybe with all ten fingers. The person using ten fingers could do it with five times more ease, or put it opposite, the person using only two fingers has to use five times more effort to get the same kind of results than someone who uses more of their resources. So if you’re only using part of your brain, like for example, reading is a very left‐brain process. Left‐brain, we learn in high school biology, is logic, words, linear, language, sounds. That’s reading, but reading really should be more of a right‐brain or at least more whole‐brain, meaning if the left brain is logical, then we know the right brain is more imagination, more creativity, more visualization, more emotion. School doesn’t really foster those areas as much, because we’ve grown up in a school system that — look at the SAT. It’s math or language, words, but where are all the other intelligences? So it’s not about how smart are you but how are you smart? Do you see the difference? Jennifer: Yeah. It’s not how smart are you but how — I’ve already forgotten it, Jim. I’m a good student of yours. I need your stuff. Jim: It’s not how smart are you; it’s how are you smart. When you’re taking notes, and I encourage people to take notes, because it’ll boost your comprehension and your retention 50 percent. Something very simple you could do, a quick tip, is you could draw a line down a piece of paper, and on the left side, you write on the top — this is what I want you to do. Note taking on the left side, and on the right side of the paper, I want you to write note making. There’s a difference. On one side, you’re taking notes. On the right side, you’re making notes. The difference is, on the left side, and this is a useful tool for you, as we’re talking in this conversation and you hear something that, “Oh, that’s a really great quote, or that’s a really great tip,” that you’re going to write down in note taking side, the left side. But if you’re going Jennifer McLean’s Healing With The Masters: Vol. 9 Page 8 of 36 Guest: Jim Kwik May 17, 2012 Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Jennifer McLean | Healing With The Masters to expound on it, on yourself, saying, “Oh, how is that related to this,” or you have a question about that, or this is how I’m going to use this, then I would write that on the right side, because you’re making notes instead of just taking notes. I think that will help you make things much more practical and much more powerful that way. When it comes to reading, what I’m saying here is use your whole brain. People talk about whole‐brain learning. I just call it whole‐self learning, meaning yes, it’s your three brains, and it’s your left and right brain, but it’s also your conscious and your unconscious. It’s also your different, multiple intelligences. It’s also your different learning styles that you’re accessing. It’s so much more. It’s also your lifestyle, how much rest and sleep that you’re getting. It’s how much fresh air and fresh water that you’re getting and the nutrition that you’re putting in your body. We do nothing in a vacuum. So much of it has to do with this conversation that we’re having over focus, but I wanted to address that upfront, because I’m going to give you tips on how to remember names better and how to read faster, but if you feel like if you’re going to learn faster that it’s going to be more overwhelming or more difficult or you’re not going to understand as much, that’s not the case. I can tell you, ever since I learned these skills two decades ago, and for our clients, it helps you — Jennifer, I know we’ve had these conversations with our friends, Jack Canfield and other individuals, that you can only be truly happy when you’re fulfilling your soul’s purpose. I think it’s wonderful how you’re fulfilling your soul’s purpose. I love being on the path with everyone on this call, and I think it’s hard to fulfill our soul’s purpose when we’re inundated sometimes and overwhelmed, when the little things in life kind of get to us, a PIN number here, a passcode here, a name here, an email here that you have to keep up with. So what I want to do is help kind of metaphorically upgrade your brain so it kind of can handle more information. We can tap into the unbelievable power of our own minds so that we can read and learn and think and focus and remember almost effortlessly. Jennifer: Jim, I love the way you’re approaching this, too, because it’s not just about improving sales. I’ve heard these things before about you have to remember people’s names. This is about improving our lives. This is about moving out of overwhelm, moving out of upset and the constraints of the fact that we can’t remember stuff, that we’ve lost focus, that we’ve lost concentration. So thank you for really approaching this from this kind of new angle of really helping us live a better life. That’s just a wonderful, wonderful thing. So my next question is my usual question. How? Jim: How? Let’s do it. All right, so let’s roll up our sleeves, and let’s get into that peak state. I know before the call started and we were welcoming individuals, we were talking about state, and I think all learning is state‐dependent. All learning is state‐dependent, and what is your state? Your state is your current presence, your mind, your body, your emotion. What that means to me is, before I try to learn anything, I put myself in a peak state, meaning that, if I’m bored or I’m tired or I’m frustrated or if I’m just not in my zone, I’m not going to get the most out of it, because what I put in is what I get out. So if I read something in that state of boredom, then I’m going to be equally motivated to apply the information. Jennifer McLean’s Healing With The Masters: Vol. 9 Page 9 of 36 Guest: Jim Kwik May 17, 2012 Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Jennifer McLean | Healing With The Masters So the first thing that I do is I always get myself in a peak state when I learn something. Kwik Learning, as much as it is strategy — I can give people some of the most amazing step‐by‐step strategies for remembering names, a very important skill for people to have. It’s very embarrassing when we forget someone’s name, and even energetically also, strategies for reading faster, strategies for memorizing a speech without notes, but what I start with always is state. All learning is state‐dependent. So attitude is huge. Kwik Learning is as much an attitude as it is a set of skills. It’s a childlike attitude. I remember a time in my life when I was a fast learner or when I was having playful fun. Who are the fastest learners on the planet? I’m putting my hand right now kind of below my waist. Children, right? I did this in front of an international audience. You can appreciate this, Jennifer. I was speaking in front of an international audience. There must have been 60 nations represented there, and it was being translated in multiple languages. Then I would ask people — it’s so funny. You say a joke, and half the audience laughs. Then you’re on to something serious, and then the other half of the audience laughs. Jennifer: There’s a ten‐second delay in the translation. I love that. Jim: I know. It’s so funny, but when I did that, I asked the audience, “Who are the fastest learners on the planet?” I put my arm by my waist, and a whole table yelled out, “Pygmies.” To this day — this was six, seven years ago. To this day I still don’t know what that means, but children, right? Children. How fast can a child learn a second language or a third language? How fast can I child pick up a musical instrument? I think one of the reasons — certainly part of it is biological, in terms of the brain and how it forms connections. I would also say part of it also is that attitude. I think as we grow old — and I don’t mean just chronological or biological age. I mean just age of our mind, the age of our heart. Sometimes we find, as we grow older, we feel like we know everything, and then we don’t learn anything, because our cup is full. So I would say, if we’re going to go into it, let’s roll up our sleeves on how do you do this. I would kind of remember that time when learning was not a chore, because the majority of everything that you know, in terms of learning, did not come from school. I come from a family of educators. My mother is a school teacher, my aunt. I come from a family of educators. I have such an admiration for teachers and such a respect for the challenges of this system that we’ve put them in. It’s really under strain, but I would say the first thing is to remember being like a child and put yourself in a creative state. Part of it is your physiology, because your physiology affects your psychology. You know that even more than I do, Jennifer. Just by changing your physical body, it changes your mind. It changes your attitude. Right now, let’s do this. Sit up straight. I would ask you right now, do this with me, because again, what you put in is what you get out. Learning is not a one‐way, rote system. Jennifer McLean’s Healing With The Masters: Vol. 9 Page 10 of 36 Guest: Jim Kwik May 17, 2012 Copyright 2012. All Rights Reserved. Jennifer McLean | Healing With The Masters
Description: