How To Learn So Fast It’s Almost Unfair

How To Learn So Fast It’s Almost Unfair

Summary: How to Learn Like the Top 1%

In this insightful video, an MIT graduate and former CEO shares his personal journey from a struggling student to a high-performing learner. He debunks the myth that intelligence is a fixed trait, arguing instead that in the age of AI, the only real advantage is the speed and efficiency of your learning.

The Brain’s Limitations

The speaker explains that the brain, particularly the prefrontal cortex, has limited capacity—like a “4 oz bowl.” Trying to cram too much information at once is a metabolic disaster leading to failure. Instead, he advocates for a system that respects the brain’s serial processing nature, famously known as the 3C Protocol.

The 3C Protocol: Compress, Compile, Consolidate

This protocol breaks learning down into three distinct stages:

  • Compress: Reduce vast amounts of information into manageable chunks. Use techniques like selection (the 80/20 rule), association (connecting new to old), and chunking (simplifying concepts).
  • Compile: Move beyond hoarding information to actual mastery. This involves managing your “cadence” with the 90-minute ultradian cycle, testing yourself frequently (“learn, test, learn, test”), and using immersion or teaching others to solidify knowledge.
  • Consolidate: The crucial phase where learning is wired into the brain. This happens not during focus, but during rest. Techniques like 10-second micro-breaks, Non-Sleep Deep Rest (NSDR), and quality sleep are essential for retention.

Final Thoughts

Ultimately, learning is described as an ocean with its own rhythm. By stopping the race against others, silencing the inner critic, and honoring the cycles of work and rest, anyone can master any skill. Intelligence is not about how much you know, but how effectively you can adapt and grow.

Vocabulary Table

Term Pronunciation Definition Used in sentence
Commodity /kəˈmɒdɪti/ A raw material or primary agricultural product that can be bought and sold; something useful or valuable but common. Intelligence is a commodity in the world of AI today.
Metabolically /ˌmɛtəˈbɒlɪkli/ Relating to the chemical processes that occur within a living organism in order to maintain life. That’s metabolically very expensive for your brain.
Adaptive /əˈdæptɪv/ Designed or serving for adaptation; able to change to suit different conditions. Carnegie Mellon University tested an adaptive learning system.
Internalize /ɪnˈtɜːrnəlaɪz/ Make (attitudes or behavior) part of one’s nature by learning or unconscious assimilation. Chess grandmasters can internalize 50,000 patterns.
Consolidate /kənˈsɒlɪdeɪt/ To make (something) physically stronger or more solid; to reinforce or strengthen one’s position or power. You have to consolidate it to retain what you’ve learned forever.
Savant /sæˈvɑːnt/ A learned person, especially a distinguished scientist; often used to refer to someone with a mental disability who has certain abilities far in excess of average. Kim Peek was a savant, kind of like a walking, talking Google.
Cadence /ˈkeɪdns/ A modulation or inflection of the voice; a rhythmic sequence or flow. The timer is about managing your learning cadence.
Ultradian /ʌlˈtreɪdiən/ Recurrent periods or cycles repeated throughout a 24-hour day. This is called the ultradian cycle; your brain operates in 90-minute blocks.
Immersion /ɪˈmɜːrʒn/ The action of immersing someone or something in a liquid; deep mental involvement. Tool number two is immersion; you must test in the arena.
Protocol /ˈproʊtəkɒl/ The official procedure or system of rules governing affairs of state or diplomatic occasions. I call it the 3C protocol: Compress, Compile, and Consolidate.
Cognitive /ˈkɒɡnɪtɪv/ Relating to cognition (the mental action or process of acquiring knowledge). This region is your tiny cognitive bowl.
Excruciatingly /ɪkˈskruːʃieɪtɪŋli/ To an intensely painful degree. Do it at an excruciatingly slow pace.
Fertility /fərˈtɪləti/ The quality of being fertile; productiveness. The soil must rest to regain its fertility.
Intuitively /ɪnˈtuːɪtɪvli/ Without conscious reasoning; instinctively. Farmers have always intuitively known this.
Prefrontal Cortex /priːˈfrʌntl ˈkɔːrtɛks/ The front part of the frontal lobe of the brain, involved in complex behaviors like planning and personality. One of its hungriest parts is your prefrontal cortex.

Vocabulary Flashcards



While-viewing Tasks

Complete these tasks while watching the video to master the learning techniques:



Guided Notes

Fill in the key terms and numbers as you listen:

  • The brain burns up to % of the body’s total fuel.
  • The 3C Protocol stands for: , , and Consolidate.
  • Our brain can only juggle about independent ideas at a time.
  • The “Ultradian Cycle” involves minutes of deep work followed by 20 minutes of rest.
  • NSDR stands for .

Questions

Answer these questions based on the video:

  1. Why does the speaker call the prefrontal cortex a “tiny cognitive bowl”?
  2. What did the Carnegie Mellon study reveal about “struggle” in learning?
  3. How does chess grandmaster Magnus Carlsen demonstrate “compression”?
  4. Why is “teaching to learn” considered a “boss tool”?

Checklist

Tick off these concepts as they are explained:

  • The metabolic cost of the prefrontal cortex
  • The “Generation Effect”
  • The 80/20 Rule (Selection)
  • Kim Peek (Rain Man) example
  • Micro-breaks (10-20 seconds)

Embedded Video:

Fill in the Blanks Exercise

1. Intelligence is a in the world of AI today.

2. Your brain weighs only three pounds but burns up to percent of your body’s total fuel.

3. The prefrontal cortex is the function of your brain.

4. 99% of learners try to learn by jamming and .

5. Our human brain is built for learning, not parallel processing.

6. The 3C Protocol stands for , Compile, and Consolidate.

7. The first step of compression is ; asking what is the 20% that matters.

8. You can’t learn something new until you it to something you already know.

9. Kim Peek was a savant who could recall 12,000 books but lacked the bridge between his brain’s .

10. Memory alone is not .

11. The cycle suggests 90 minutes of work followed by 20 minutes of rest.

12. Tool number one is burn; do it at an excruciatingly slow pace.

13. Tool number two is ; you must test in the arena.

14. NSDR stands for Non-Sleep Rest.

15. Your only competition is from yesterday.

Vocabulary Quiz

1. What does it mean if something is a “commodity”?

a) It is extremely rare and priceless
b) It is useful but common and can be bought/sold
c) It is a type of computer chip
d) It is a complex theory

2. “Metabolically expensive” refers to:

a) Consuming a lot of energy (glucose/oxygen)
b) Costing a lot of money to buy
c) Requiring expensive equipment
d) Being physically heavy

3. To “internalize” a pattern means to:

a) Write it down in a notebook
b) Forget it immediately
c) Make it part of your unconscious nature
d) Teach it to someone else

4. A “savant” is someone who:

a) Is very wealthy
b) Struggles with all forms of learning
c) Is a CEO of a company
d) Has extraordinary abilities in a specific area

5. “Consolidate” in learning means to:

a) Break things into smaller pieces
b) Strengthen and retain information
c) Delete old memories
d) Speed up the reading process

6. What is an “Ultradian” cycle?

a) A biological rhythm occurring more than once a day
b) A cycle that lasts exactly 24 hours
c) A yearly learning goal
d) A type of bicycle

7. “Immersion” involves:

a) Reading a book quickly
b) Avoiding difficult tasks
c) Deep involvement in an activity/environment
d) Sleeping for 8 hours

8. If something is done “intuitively,” it is done:

a) With a lot of planning
b) Instinctively, without conscious reasoning
c) Very slowly
d) By reading a manual

9. “Cognitive” relates to:

a) Mental processes like thinking and knowing
b) Physical exercise
c) Emotional reactions only
d) Mechanical engineering

10. “Excruciatingly” means:

a) Surprisingly
b) Happily
c) Quickly
d) To an intensely painful degree

Fact or Fiction Quiz

1. The brain can process millions of ideas in parallel, just like modern AI.

a) Fact
b) Fiction

2. Students at Carnegie Mellon learned twice as much when the material got increasingly difficult (adaptive learning).

a) Fact
b) Fiction

3. Kim Peek’s unique brain structure allowed him to master social skills faster than anyone else.

a) Fact
b) Fiction

4. Research suggests that a 10-second pause after learning can help the brain replay the sequence 20 times.

a) Fact
b) Fiction

5. The “Generation Effect” means that struggle hinders learning and should be avoided.

a) Fact
b) Fiction

Extension Activities

Put the 3C Protocol into practice with these activities:



The Ultradian Experiment

For your next study session or work block, set a timer for exactly 90 minutes of focused work. When it rings, force yourself to take a 20-minute break (walk, sit quietly, do nothing). Record how you felt before and after compared to your usual routine.

Difficulty:
Easy

The Feynman Technique

Choose a complex topic you are currently trying to learn. Simplify it on a piece of paper as if you were teaching it to a 12-year-old. Identify the gaps in your explanation (where you get stuck) and go back to the source material to fill them.

Difficulty:
Medium

Teach to Learn

Partner A picks a topic they know well and has 5 minutes to “Compress” and teach it to Partner B. Partner B must then summarize it back. Switch roles. Did teaching it help you clarify your own thoughts?

Difficulty:
Medium

The Compression Challenge

As a group, take a 5-page article or a chapter from a textbook. Your goal is to compress it into a single page of notes (diagrams, bullet points, models) that captures 80% of the value. Compare your compressed versions.

Difficulty:
Hard

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