2021-05-15
Basically, Jess and me, at the moment.
Basically, Jess and me, at the moment.
Tetris + snake = Pixel Fill.
Art school students envision post-pandemic New Yorker covers.
A good profile of our likely next mayor. ( ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ )
How to become insanely well connected.
For at least the past two decades, I’ve been puzzling through personal productivity, trying to figure out systems and approaches and tools and hacks that help me get stuff done. On the one hand, I feel pretty excellent about how that’s worked, as I’ve managed to make a bunch of things in the world. On the other, during those twenty years, I’ve also felt behind and overwhelmed, have procrastinated and mis-prioritized, and consistently fell short of what I actually wanted to accomplish on most days.
Looking back, it’s clear those struggles boil down to two major challenges:
– Not taking on more each day than could even possibly be squeezed into 24 hours.
– Actually doing the most important, but also most difficult, tasks on my to-do list.
So far this year, I’ve been thinking a bunch about the first of those two challenges, which has led me to pare waaaaaay back. I’ve tried to reduce my obligations, whether work or play, to others or to myself, in an effort to align my plans and intentions better with the limits of reality. And though maintaining that more minimal approach requires ongoing work—mostly, regularly weeding my commitments, as old obligation-adding habits die hard—it seems to be going pretty well.
Where I’ve continued to fall short, however, is on the second challenge: completing (or, honestly, even just getting started on) each day’s important but difficult tasks. Sometimes, that’s because other, genuinely urgent tasks crop up. More often, it’s because I end up doing a bunch of easier ‘bullshit work’ tasks instead. (And, at least once or twice a week, it’s because I self-soothe task list overwhelm by deep-diving into some semi-relevant research rabbit hole for hours and hours at a stretch.)
Thinking about the important / difficult task challenge, I’ve come to realize it’s fundamentally a question of keeping my word. In this case, keeping my word to myself. Putting a task on my to-do list is essentially a promise I’m making that I’m going to do that task. Each day I do other stuff instead, I’m breaking those promises, again and again.
Which is why I was recently particularly interested to discover a new exercise from Mark Forster, one of my favorite time management thinkers. His idea, essentially, is to build that kind of self-promising skill, incrementally, with a deliberate practice approach. Here’s how it works:
First, choose a single task (not an entire project, just something finite and concrete, a first step). Define what ‘completion’ means for that task (e.g., finish a first draft of the proposal, make the call, finish reading the chapter). And then do that task to completion.
Your score is now one.
Next, choose two tasks. Do them each to completion, in order. Your score is two.
Now back for three tasks, etc. You’re permitted to do non-discretionary tasks in the middle of each pass—taking on something your boss tells you to do immediately, going to a meeting, addressing a genuine emergency. But you can’t do any discretionary task other than the next task on your list.
If you do, your final score for the round is the last batch you successfully completed (i.e., if you fail partway through a seven-task group, your score is the completed round of six). Start again with a single task, and build up a new score from one.
The aim here isn’t to keep going up forever. Instead, it’s simply to increase over time the size of task group that you’re able to reliably complete.
So far, I’ve only been trying out the approach for a few days. And I still, decisively, suck at it. But I’m loving the approach nonetheless. It’s gamified in a fun and motivating way, while still providing clear, structured, and immediate feedback—exactly what’s required for practice that yields genuine improvement over time.
At this point, I’m not entirely certain that the exercise is sustainable over the long-haul. But, for the moment at least, I’m glad to be doing it, glad to be directly addressing my second big time management challenge. It feels like the best plan I’ve found thus far for building a fundamental productivity keystone skill: knowing I can make myself do something important just by telling myself that I will.
An excellent (and non-douchey) guide to networking online.
In the timeless advice of Stephen Covey, it’s best to begin with the end in mind. Yet, sometimes, that end isn’t exactly clear. And, therefore, the plan for getting there isn’t particularly clear, either. As I mentioned in a prior post, that’s essentially my friend Cal Newport’s explanation of procrastination: when our brain doesn’t believe our approach is going to get us where we want, it’s tough to start on the next step.
For larger-scale projects, I’ve increasingly become zen to that reality. The first piece of some big initiative will sit on my to-do list, untouched for weeks or even months. But, during that time, the whole thing is still sort of bubbling in my subconscious. Eventually, enough direction and clarity will percolate up that I’ll suddenly know what the endpoint looks like. And I’ll instantly overcome the built inertia of procrastination, feel compelled to drop everything else and get right to work on the long-delayed first task.
In the case of this blog, however, that hasn’t seemed to work. For months, I’ve felt completely unsure of what this site is even about. (As Jess said to me, when I mentioned as much a couple of weeks back: “people still have blogs?”) I’ve waited and percolated and brain-back-burned. And, thus far, it hasn’t really helped.
Recently, however, I’ve started to think that I’ve been looking at it all wrong. These days, blogs and social media presence and whatever else are all done with an aim towards branding and positioning and owning a space and establishing expertise. But, back when this site was really cooking, I wasn’t actively doing any of those things. In fact, back then, this site wasn’t really about anything at all. Which, kind of, was the point.
So, in short, I’ve decided to turn back time. I’ll be shooting for at-least-weekly posting, but with an assortment of random stories poorly told, tortuous misadventures elliptically relayed, and half-baked musings loosely fleshed out. I’m beginning with no end in mind, aside from just getting back to writing regularly. And, for now at least, that seems good enough.
[Addendum: as was pointed out to me by a few people, if it was good enough for Seinfeld, perhaps a site about nothing isn’t a terrible place to (re-)start.]
Update to a classic: (newer) AI’s writing pickup lines.