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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma
A Guide to True Greatness and Deep Satisfaction in a Chaotic World
The Way of Excellence delves into the pursuit of peak performance, blending scientific research with personal development strategies to help us achieve enduring excellence and fulfillment in our personal and professional lives.
Let’s start with this: Excellence isn’t some rare trait reserved for elite performers or child prodigies. It’s an intimately human impulse – a natural pull toward engaging fully in something worthwhile, in a way that reflects both who we are and what we value. Put simply, true excellence is the intersection of mastery and mattering.
Biologically, humans are wired to seek out this sweet spot. From the earliest forms of life, there has been an innate drive to grow. Scientists describe this as homeostatic upregulation – the tendency to not just survive, but to flourish. In modern life, that same force shows up as the desire to learn something new, improve an existing skill, and contribute our gifts where we can.
Modern science has also mapped a path to this progress and the way stations along the route. We begin the journey at unconscious incompetence – not knowing what we don’t know. With time and repetition, we arrive at conscious incompetence, where we become painfully aware of our shortcomings. With more time and repetition, we arrive at conscious competence, where we engage in deliberate practice. Finally, we reach unconscious competence – the stage of the journey where competency becomes second nature. You’ve already walked this path countless times – literally, in the case of first learning to walk – so you know firsthand how frustrating and how fulfilling it can be. Nevertheless, the fact that you have charted this course so many times is a testament to how ingrained it is within our species.
Psychologically, the way of excellence offers an antidote to many of the ailments of modern life. Emptiness, burnout, and alienation often stem from spending time and energy on misaligned or misguided endeavors. The most common way this shows up is when we let a short-term thought or feeling take us away from a long-term goal or value. When we turn to substances, even though we consider health a priority. When we spend our evenings online, despite believing family is number one. When we take a shortcut at work, even while wanting to be a person of integrity.
Philosophically, the idea of excellence as central to a good life shows up again and again across cultures and eras. Engaging deeply with that which matters to us fosters a sense of autonomy, competence, and relatedness – three key ingredients to a life that is both great and satisfying. And, of particular relevance and value in the 21st century: working on tangible, meaningful tasks – whether raising a child, polishing a manuscript, or tending a garden – is profoundly grounding. An expression of true excellence tethers us to who we are and where we belong in the universe, almost instantly silencing the din of the chaotic world around us.
The Way of Excellence (2026) explores what it takes to achieve greatness and satisfaction in today’s world. It lays out the foundations, mindsets, habits, and practices that enable peak performers to pursue excellence sustainably, without compromising their well-being or ambition.
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Try Blinkist to get the key ideas from 7,500+ bestselling nonfiction titles and podcasts. Listen or read in just 15 minutes.
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Blink 3 of 8 - The 5 AM Club
by Robin Sharma