The Gap and The Gain cover

The Gap and The Gain

by Benjamin Hardy and Dan Sullivan

Business
BOOK INFOGRAPHIC The Gap and The Gain by Benjamin Hardy and Dan Sullivan TL;DR Unhappiness comes from measuring yourself against anever-moving ideal. KEY THEMES MindsetGratitudeSelf-AwarenessHappiness 8 min read 13 sections High achievers... Being in the GAIN means you measure yourself backward,against where you were before. You don't compareyourself to something external.

The Five Big Ideas

The Gap and The Gain Summary

Introduction

You’re in the GAP every time you measure yourself or your situation against an ideal.And while ideals are meant to provide direction, motivation, and meaning to our lives, they are not the measuring stick.

Hardy writes,

Being in the GAIN means you measure yourself backward, against where you were before. You measure your own progress. You don’t compare yourself to something external. You don’t measure yourself against your ideals.

Being in the GAIN means you measure yourself backward, against where you were before. You measure your own progress. You don’t compare yourself to something external. You don’t measure yourself against your ideals.

Chapter 1: Embrace the Freedom of “Wants”

The GAP is based on an unhealthy “need” or attachment to something outside of yourself. You’re trying to free yourself FROM something, and until you do you won’t be happy. When you’re in the GAP, you’re avoiding “here” while trying to get “there”—but never actually arriving “there.”

By contrast, the GAIN is based on being in harmony with what you want and knowing that you don’t need it. When you’re in the GAIN, you live your life based on intrinsic motivation and harmonious passion, which creates flow and high performance. This enables you to commit 100 percent and pursue what you want without unhealthy attachments.

Journaling Questions

Chapter 2: Be Self-Determined

External reference points make it impossible to feel successful because no matter what you’ve done, the success criteria are always moving.

Getting out of the GAP and into the GAIN means you’ve made yourself your own reference point. The GAP means your life is determined by someone or something external. The GAIN means you’re living a self-determined life.

When your reference point is internal, you make the final call on what “success” means to you, regardless of what other people think.

When your reference point is internal, happiness and success are always right here and right now.

Journaling Questions

“Will This Make the Boat Go Faster?” 🚣‍♂️This is the story of how one man led the British Men’s Eight Rowing Team to Olympic gold victory.(And his winning strategy for achieving more).(Thread) 🧵pic.twitter.com/5k4vMegrl3— Sam Thomas Davies (@SamThomasDavies)November 24, 2021

“Will This Make the Boat Go Faster?” 🚣‍♂️This is the story of how one man led the British Men’s Eight Rowing Team to Olympic gold victory.(And his winning strategy for achieving more).(Thread) 🧵pic.twitter.com/5k4vMegrl3

Chapter 3: The Compound Effect of The Gap or Gain

Being in the GAP creates a negative compound effect in your life. But being in the GAIN creates a positive compound effect in your life.

Hardy explains that the GAP and the GAIN is a useful tool because there is language for it. Explain the GAP and the GAIN concept to those you love, and give them permission to call you out when you go into the GAP.

Psychologists have found that practicing mental subtraction—thinking of the absence of the good things in your life—can make you appreciate them more. to remind yourself of the GAINS in your life.

Start using the GAP and GAIN language in the following ways:

Journaling Questions

Chapter 4: Always Measure Backward

It’s easy to forget about your GAINS because your memories are always reconstructed in the present, based on your current perspective.

Hardy recommends journaling or doing an annual review to tap back into the context of your former self, and see the massive GAINS.

Being reminded of the easily forgotten past boosts your hope, motivation, confidence, and resilience. You’re not the exact same person you were in the past. You’ve evolved and grown a lot, even in the past 90 days.

Take time regularly to measure your GAINS for different time frames and remember, always measure backward.

Journaling Questions

Chapter 5: Measure 3 Daily Wins

What you do during the 60 minutes before bed has an enormous impact on your sleep quality, as well as the direction and quality of your next day.

Reactivity begets reactivity. If you’re staring at your phone before bed, mindlessly scrolling or consuming, not only will you sleep worse, but you’ll continue that same unhealthy addictive behavior the next day.

Write in your journal three wins from that day. Then, write down the three biggest wins you’ll get the next day. No more than three.

Do this every day for the rest of your life.

Pearson’s Law states: When performance is measured, performance improves. When performance is measured and reported, the rate of improvement accelerates.

Having a daily accountability partner combines tracking and reporting.

Keep your accountability partnership simple. It shouldn’t take more than 2 minutes per day.

Chapter 6: Transform Every Experience Into a Gain

Being in the GAIN is not simply about seeing life on the bright side. Being in the GAIN is about taking every experience life throws at you and transforming it to serve you.

When you’re in the GAP, you ask yourself, “Why did this happen?” and act as a victim. When you’re in the GAIN, you control the meaning of your past. You cherish your past and use it as precious feedback for clarifying what you truly want and value.

Being in the GAIN is an approach-motivated way of life, and it enables you to turn every valley into a future peak. Being in the GAIN empowers you to take any experience and be better, not bitter.

Journaling Questions

Stories

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