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What if it were easy?
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One of the key questions I’ve asked myself for years when a task comes along is “What if this were easy”, so seeing Oliver Burkeman bring up the same question in week three got me smiling. One problem with typical productivity advice is that it assumes you need a deep reservoir of motivation to do
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From Shelter to Side Hustles – Profit Took Over Our Lives
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What happens to life when basic needs, like housing, becomes an investment vehicle? How does you life change when the joy of watching sports is tied up with the idolization of gambling? What do we do with our leisure time when so much of the push around us asks us to monetize our hobbies calling
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Sipping the Comfortable Cocktail of Procrastination and Excuses
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I’ve lost count of how many people have told me they want to write a book — but never start. They want to be authors, but they’ve invented roadblocks limiting them from writing. They enjoy their comfortable cocktail of procrastination and excuses that gives them license to avoid writing. If you’ve got young kids and
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Reclaiming Ownership – From Plain Text Tasks to Headphones and Book Reviews
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If you like this content, become a member or purchase my book Analogue Productivity. This helps the content continue. For the love of plain text Over the last two years I’ve taken ownership of much of my media. I own movies on discs that are placed on my server that are streamed via Jellyfin to
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Be free of obligations
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In truth, I don’t actually like reading later. 99% of the time, if I save something to read later, the fact that I’m not reading it now is a good sign that I don’t actually want to read it and should free myself of the obligation. Saving the article is an act of self-soothing, telling
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Endless Scroll, Empty Soul – The Tyranny of Reading Later
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Pull and refresh on YouTube to bring you some new videos that their algorithm thinks you’ll like. Pull and refresh on Mastodon to see new articles recommended by people you follow, I’m sure some of them are interesting. Reddit lets you scroll to the “bottom” of a list of things that may interest you that
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Friction, Focus, and the Fight to Feel Human
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Today’s issue of 3 Threads ended up being all about the value of friction. Far from being something to avoid, it acts as a filtering function to help us decide what is valuable to us. Booking Time Should Require Friction I’ve long thought that friction is a filtering force in all aspects of your life.
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Does Farsighted by Steven Johnson Actually Help You Make Better Decisions?
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This month we looked at Farsighted by Steven Johnson in book club. Join the club to get all the content on it. Next month we’re reading Meditations for Mortals. The purpose of Farsighted is to help us make better decisions with Johnson saying that outside of a pro/con list, we teach almost nothing to most
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What are you optimizing life for?
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Optimize for what you care about Because, at the risk of sounding a little fruity, I believe that a life in which we habitually abandon the known Good Things in order to helplessly stab at “”managing”” a nebulous morass of chaoses that we can never control is not much of a life at all. –
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How to See Your Blindspots Before They Burn You
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While this newsletter is free, membership helps support my work so that it can keep showing up in your inbox. Last week we looked at how diversity improves decisions, today let’s look at how we can improve our decisions when we’re faced with personal decisions. One of the first questions I ask when evaluating a
