• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to secondary sidebar

IRL Experience Design

  • Best Of
  • My Work
  • About
  • Austin Experiences
    • 60+ Weird Things To Do In Austin
    • The Top 13 Immersive Experiences in Austin, Texas
    • 45+ Unique Things To Do in Austin (A local’s guide)
    • Things to Do in Austin When it Rains
    • 5 Fun & Unique Austin Team Building Activities for Small Teams
    • Austin Halloween Guide
    • Austin Christmas Guide
    • Austin Easter Guide
  • Contact

Mindset: The New Psychology of Success (Carol S. Dweck)

October 16, 2020

Title: Mindset: The New Psychology of Success

Author: Carol S. Dweck. She is “a pioneering researcher in the field of motivation, why people succeed (or don’t) and how to foster success.”

My opinion: This book deserves all the praise it gets. The growth mindset is an incredibly useful concept and the fact that she has science to back it up makes it that much more compelling.

Should You Read This Book?

If you have these challenges:

You are having trouble getting motivated, accomplishing things, believing in your abilities.

… then it might help you:

by giving practical ways you can stop judging yourself, including focusing on your effort instead of your results.

But you might not want to read it if:

You don’t want to reflect on how concepts apply to your life. The ideas she presents are easily understood but I think without close examination you might think you have the growth mindset when you don’t.

What I Got Out Of This Book

The Fixed Mindset Is Everywhere

After reading it I started being able to see each type of mindset creep up in friends’ and coworkers’ behavior. I now bristle at hearing “I can’t…” or “That’s not who I am..” or “That’s just who I am…”. Obviously some things can’t be changed, but these sorts of phrases are too often an automatic reaction to everyday struggles and disappointment. It’s extremely disheartening to see the fixed mindset block people from pursuing a path they would really love to pursue.

The goal is not as important as the process.

Yes, everyone wants the goal and everyone has to do the work, so on the surface it might see like mindset doesn’t factor in that much. But while the fixed mindset is constantly judging the current distance to the goal and judging themselves on it, the growth mindset is moving along and reaping rewards of all sizes from the growth they enjoy along the way. The same path that is a struggle to one person is an adventure to another.

A Few of My Favorite Lessons

Don’t define yourself by the results, define it by the effort you put in.

Don’t define success by the results, define it by the effort you put in.

Once you define success as putting in effort, you’ll start being more interested in learning and growing instead of being focused constantly on the goal.

A fixed mindset makes others judges. A growth mindset views them as potentially helpful allies.

Your qualities are not fixed. You can change.

Don’t praise the outcomes, praise the effort.

Look at challenges as an opportunity for growth instead of letting them define you. They can even excite you and you can seek them out for the rewards they provide.

Setbacks are motivating for the growth mindset. Those with the fixed mindset conclude “that’s who I am” when faced with setbacks.

The reason we revere prodigies over the person that spent countless hours to develop equal skill to the prodigy is because believing that “you have to be a prodigy” lets us off the hook of having to put in effort. And that we often look down on the equally good non-prodigy because it robs us of our excuses.

Cognitive therapy helps people make more realistic judgments but it does not take them out of the fixed mindset and the world of judgment.

It’s not that we have either a “growth” or “fixed” mindset. In different situations we might have one or the other. It’s important to identify what triggers you into the fixed mindset. She even suggests making the fixed-mindset into a persona and giving it a name so you can talk it down.

Some Meta For You

  •  Effort Required of you to get the most out of this book:  Soul: 10%, Emotions: 40%, Mental: 50%, Physical: %.
  • Topics Covered: Growth Mindset, Process not goal
  • Qualifications of Author: Scientist, Expert, Coach
  • Content Source: Author’s experience, Author’s research, Other’s research
  • Content and Style
    • Tone: Warm
    • Writing Competency: Good
    • Repetitiveness: Supportive redundancy
    • Explanations: Good
    • Organization: Good
    • Anecdote level: Appropriate (10%)
    • Convincingness of evidence: Good
  • Annoyances: None.

Posted Under: Productivity Tags: #Books

  • « Go to Previous Page
  • Page 1
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 302
  • Page 303
  • Page 304
  • Page 305
  • Page 306
  • Interim pages omitted …
  • Page 364
  • Go to Next Page »

Primary Sidebar

About Me

I make awesome experiences for people. Read More

Search my blog

Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors

See My Favorite Books

  • For IRL XD
  • For Learning
  • For Getting Things Done

@IRL_Experience_Design

instaglogo

Secondary Sidebar

See My Halloween Event Guide Featuring Halloween events for over 1000 cities!

A cute ghost holding a map of Halloween Events

See My Holiday Event Guide Featuring Holiday events for over 1000 cities!

A cute elf holds a map of Christmas and holiday events around the city.

VISIT MY BOUTIQUE IMMERSIVE EXPERIENCE

SEE MY AUSTIN EVENTS WALL CALENDAR

Austin Events and Things to Do 2025 Wall Calendar Cover

Read My Recent Posts

  • Bulk Cold Emailing For Beginners
  • IRLXD Update 9/12/2024
  • Eureka Room Update 6/18/2024
  • A Creator’s Trap: Confusing the Joy of Creating with the User Experience
  • Lessons Learned: Don’t fall in love with a challenge that does not need taken on.
  • Where to find 1000’s of books on creating successful experiences
  • Designing With Experiential Modes (Part 2)

  • Contact
  • About
  • Privacy Policy