The Daily Mastery Podcast by Robin Sharma

Never Go to Bed Without Doing THIS

Robin Sharma Season 1 Episode 1398

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0:00 | 2:56

Study for an hour a day. It’s remarkable how many people are unprepared. They show up for meetings with little advance knowledge, deal with customers with minimal expertise and have little sense over what they want their future to look like. In 2026, read, write, strategize and reflect for at least 60 minutes a day. For breakthrough results.

My latest book “The Wealth Money Can’t Buy” is full of fresh ideas and original tools that I’m absolutely certain will cause quantum leaps in your positivity, productivity, wellness, and happiness. You can order it now by clicking here.

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Do not go to sleep unless you've spent 60 minutes in learning. You know, I mean, a lot of people say, well, I don't have that time. Join what I call Traffic University. You know, I mean, in other words, if you're in the car driving to work, why listen to the news? The job of the news vision is to frighten you. The job of the news is to release cortisol, the fear hormone in your brain, so you become addicted to the news. Here's what the research says. The research says, actually, people who watch the news every day see the world less realistically than people who don't watch the news. We've never lived in a time of so much opportunity. So the 60-minute student is simply this. You make a commitment to be an eternal learner, and you make some time every day to listen to a podcast or go through an online course or watch a webinar. mean, victims don't like learning new ideas. It disrupts their safe harbor. What makes a victim is they don't want to hear a new idea. It's actually fear. They want to think the same thoughts, speak the same words, live the same life for 80 years and call it a lifetime. It takes a lot of bravery to say, I'm going to learn for 60 minutes every day and I'm going to feel the discomfort of growth. But my commitment to growth and becoming the best human being I could be is so much more important than the fear or the discomfort that I feel. And that's what makes a hero, actually.