Posts mit dem Label Selbstmanagement werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen
Posts mit dem Label Selbstmanagement werden angezeigt. Alle Posts anzeigen

Mittwoch, 16. Juli 2025

The Pomodoro Technique - Francesco Grillo

  •  Employing easy-to-use, unobtrusive tools reduces the complexity of applying the Technique while favoring continuity
  • Many time management techniques fail because they subject the people who use them to a higher level of added complexity
  • Time-boxing
  • Pause
    • A chance to do something good for your health will help you to do your best during the next pomodoro
    • its not a good idea to engage in activities that call for any significant mental effort
  • Using the remaining portion of the Pomodoro to review or repeat what you've done, make small improvements and note down what you've learned 
    • (basically: reflection)
  • At the end of the day, the completed pomodoros can be transferred in a hard-copy archive
  • Self-observation and decision-making aimed at process improvement. You can ask yourself how many pomodoros a week you spend on working acitivities and on explorative activitities, or how many Pomodoros you do on an average day of the week etc

  • Every time you feel a potential interruption coming on, put an apostrophe on the sheet where you record your Pomodoros
  • Intensify your determination to finish the current Pomodoro
  • If a Pomodoro absolutely has to be interruped - void the current Pomodoro. Then put a dash. The next Pomodoro will go better!
  • To be aware of the number and type of internal and external interruptions. Negotiate them and reschedule them
  • Set aside one Pomodoro a day to take care of urgent interruptions
  • Successfully delay these Pomodoros as far as possible
  • Gradually cut down on the number of Pomodoros used for organizing the interruptions

  • A timetable delineates the separation between work and free time. ... This leisure time is fuel for our minds. Without it, creativity, interest, and curiosity are lost.
    • A timetable measure the results of the day. ... If time runs out and these activities arent done, we try to understand what went wrong.
    • So you tell yourself: "Today I'll work late to make up for lost time." heroism and guilt makes you breach the limit set by the timetable. ... performance is ineffective tonight, then tomorrow night, and the night after. The more the timetable is systematically prolonged, the more overall results will diminish. Guild intensifies.
    • A dangerous vicious circle

  • best case scenario
    • He might use this Pomodoro to look over all the things he did the day before, to skim over the Activitiy Inventory and fill in the To Do Today Sheet, ... 
    • That everything on his desk is in place and ready, and tidies up if its not
    • He starts feeling tired. He still has a few more Pomodoros to go. He wants to get a good rest, and he tries to detach as best he can by taking a little walk.

  • The Pomodoro represents an abstaction of time
    • Time boxing concept
    • time running backwards
      • generate positive tension (eustress)
    • capable of facilitating the decision-making process
    • assert yourself and accomplish activities
    • The passage of time is no longer perceived as negative, but positive
    • opportunity to improve
    • rapidly reorganize
    • feeling ofanxiety is assuaged
    • enhanced consciousness, sharper focus on the here and now, clearer mind in deciding your next move. 
    • The result is higher productivity
    • Breaking down activities
      • less complex
      • deliver incremental value
    • Frequent breaks are essential, More lucis, conscious and effective mental capacity.
    • But the break really has to be a break.

Freitag, 11. Juli 2025

Chatter - Ethan Kross

  •  a devout believer that paying attention to our self-talk is vitally important for out mental health
  • inner experiences consistently dwarf outer ones. What participants where thinking about turned out to be a better predictor of their happiness that what they were actually doing
  • Your mood is defined not by what you did but by what your thought about
    • (2nd place in world championships feel like loosers)
  • memorizing 200-350-2765 is much easier than memorizing 2003502765
  • the more I stew over what you did to me, the more I keep those negative feelings alive, and the more likely I am to act aggressively against you as a result
  • We can create a chronic physiological stress reaction just by thinking. And when our inner voice fuels that stress, it can be devastating to our health
  • When people are going through a difficult experience, asking them to imagine how they'll feel about it ten years from now.
    • experiences are temporary, which provides hope
    • the understanding that the world is constantly in flux and circumstances are going to change.
  • Saying my own name in my head, addressing myself as if I were speaking to someone else, allowed me to immediately step back.
    • regained control of my emotions and internal conversation
    • a high usage of first-person-singular pronouns, a phenomenom calles I-talk, is a reliable marker of negative emotion.
  • Acknowledge the difficulty of creation, and then keep creating
  • people think, feel, and perform better when they frame the stressor at hand as a challnge rather than a thread
    • (Growth mindset)
    • provide encouraging "you can do it" advice to themselves, rather than catastrophizing the situation
  • a small shift in the words we use to refer to ourselves during introspection can influence our ability to control chatter in a variety of domains
  • normalizing experiences - knowing that what you're experiencing isnt unique to you, but rather something everyone experiences. Its just the stuff of life
  • In study after stdy rime found that talking to others about our negative experiences doesnt help us recover in any meaningful way
    • we often need others to help us distance, normalize, and change the way were thinking aobut the experiences were going through
    • The interlocutor ideally acknowledges the persons feelings and reflections, but then helps her put the situation in perspective
    • big-picture advice
    • + invisible support: supporting others while not making them feel bad about lacking the resources to cope on their own. Taking care of homework. Give quiet space.
    • + affectionate touch: a sign that they are safe, loved, and supported
      • improves our ability to deal with stress, promotes relationship satisfaction, and reduces feelings of loneliness
  • Green spaces seem to function like a great therapist, anti-aging elixir, and immune-system booster all in one
  • Rituals are so effective - helping us manage our inner voices. A chatter-reducing cocktail.

Freitag, 14. März 2025

Get epic shit done - Ankur Warikoo

 - Others' success will generate massive self-doubt

- Yes why is this the case?

- The biggest misconception people have is that they are the odd one out and everyone else is sorted

- The world will constantly be defining success and failure for you. Realizing this is what is called self-awareness

- Success is a relationship you have with your own self.

- Set out on that exploration. Don't wait to identify a destination

- Moving out doesn't mean quitting what you have. It means giving yourself the space to explore other things.

- Doing the same thing over and over the years does not make you gain experience in those years. Doing different things, things out of your comfort zone, to stay curious, to never rest on your laurels, to expand what you know - these truly sum up experience.

- Don't get comfortable

- No one expects a CA to make a visually colourful resume. No one expects a musician to send an Excel sheet proposal. No one expects an engineer to send a video resume. Which is why they should consider doing it! Fighting the stereotype is a great way to get attention!

- Being yourself is the coolest way to get attention. Which is scary for most people. Which is the reason most people don't.

- There is temporary discomfort in doing the unconventional. There is permanent discomfort in living life as a template.

- Mistake 9: I tool loans. Because I didn't have money yet. And I kept telling myself, "But I will have money in the future. And that's why it is okay." If you do not have the money to pay for something right now, you DO NOT have the money.

- Mistake 16: I had to make money fast, buy my parents that house, buy that fancy car, that vacation. I had to make money fast, to buy stuff. Money can buy you stuff. But the biggest thing it buys is freedom. Including freedom from stuff.

- "I wish everyone could get rich and famous and everything they ever dreamed of so they can see that's not the answer." - Jim Carrey

- Never start up because you want to make money from it. The odds of making the same money through a "boring" professional career much higher.

- The trick to waking up early is not waking up early. It is sleeping on time! The secret is to be energized, happy and productive in the morning.

- Before you assume, try this crazy thing. ASK

- It either validates your assumption or you get to understand people better. Either way, you get to be a better communicator. Win-Win :-)

- I wake up at 4:30 a.m. every morning. After meditating, singing practice and reading. I head to play tennis.

- We don't need more productivity hacks. We need to spend more time with ourselves doing what we want to do. 

- The best form of writing is the one that is written neither out of fear nor with the willingness to share. Write not because you want to be liked. Write not because you want mor likes. Write not because someone else will be impressed by you. Write because you want to express yourself. Write, because you will read it. Write, because if you won't, your bottled-up emotions will harm you alone. Write, because if you won't write it, how will you ever read what you need? Write, because no one could ever be You 2.0

- It is developing the mindset that progress is a way of life

- Writing isn't the answer to clarity. The answer lies in wether we write to get more at peace or wether we write to seek validation.

- But we are not listening to the opposite person. Instead, we are listening to our mind telling us what to say. When we listen, do we truly listen or are we preparing a response in our heads.

- Your attendance doesn't define your discipline. Your attention does.

- The quality of your presence is way more important than the forced quantity of your attendance when you're not present.

- Optimize for learning, not salary. Optimize for progress, not stability. Optimize for facing fears, not for comfort.

- Over fifty percent of my waking time goes towards things that are important, but not urgent!

- Not everyone excercises. Thus, it needs to be said more often

- Everyone watches TV, it needn't be said.

- Everyone eats Pizza, it needn't be said.

- Doing the things that are the most important are the things that make you important.

- Someone younger than you is always going to be making more money than you.

- However, no matter how much success you achieve, if you are still envious, are you truly successful?

- Satisfaction is the most powerful skill to have.

- Satisfaction in your journey.

- Satisfaction in how far you've come

- Satisfaction in all the unwanted parts of you you've scooped out.

- Satisfaction in your satisfaction

- If we start making decisions knowing they are reversible, we will discover how much lies ahead of us just because we decide and act.

- Comparing yourself to others is the biggest waste of time.

- If you truly want to compare, compare yourself to who you were yesterday.

- Instead of worrying about what might happen, anticipate what might happen. Our power to imagine is both a strength and a weakness.

- We can build our own prisons through our thoughts, or let go of all bars, break ceilings and imagine the best outcome possible. The one we pick. Is the one we live with.

- Life is full of struggle. There will be a struggle in trying to live with the world by its rules. And there will be a struggle in trying to build your own world and your own rules. You get to choose the struggle.

- You are not the only one confused. You are not the only one unsure. You are not the only one struggling. You are not dumb, inadequate, incapable. Everone is struggling. Everyone is figuring it out. Dont be harsh on yourself.

- The greatest illusion is that life should be perfect!

- People who are enjoying their lives are at a competitive advantage. Imagine having all the money you want and being miserable! Imagine living life on your own terms and enjoying it like no one else:-) Joy is the ultimate advantage. Everything else just follows.

- A meaningful job need not be one that completely consumes your whole life. You may love your job. And find impeccable joy in it. Yet if it leaves you with zero or little space for yourself, it is not the one! It's important to have your space. It's super important to not let your job encroach upon your life. And it is respectful of yourself to respect those boundaries. To find meaning in your job is beautiful. Your job being the only meaning of life is scary.

- To not have a plan and be okay with it is the best plan. It will take everything to get to that point. However, imagine yourself being asked, "Where do you see yourself five years from now?" and you reply, "I do not know. And I am OK with that." That is being at peace with where you are in life, with who you are in life.

- If you are comfortable dancing in public without alcohol or drugs, you are at peace with who you are. If you love to express yourself without numbing your senses, You are at a place of untouchable joy and peace. The only intake you need is more self-belief that you are just perfect as you are!

- If you do what everyone else will do, you will end up like everyone else.

- Complaining has never ever led someone to a solution.

- Working out teaches you discipline and patience like few other things do. You can't buy a fit body. You can't cheat to get to a fit body. You can't ride on someone else to get a fit body. You can't blame anybody for not being fit. Neither can you ask someone to get fit on your behalf. It is only going to happen if you show up every day. And be patient.

- Most people who want to start a business think they should quit their job and start a startup. Not true, in my opinion. Work nights / weekends and test your idea out

- It is the employees that run a company, not the other way around.

- I invested in stocks when the markets went high, in the hope of making fast money. I sold in panic when the market tanked, so that I didnt lose money. It should have been the exact opposite.

- If you have excess cash, wait. Wait for the right opportunity. Wait patiently. Wait for markets to drop. "No one wants to get rich slowly" - Warren Buffet

- Mistake: Renting your time and not owning any assets. Because we have to spend time working, to earn. Assets, on the other hand, make money, even when we sleep. Start a company. Own stocks. Create rental income. 

- Holding a grudge against someone requires a lot of effort. Think of all the wasted time spent being mad ad someone. You have decided to trade your peace for seeking revenge. When we hold a grudge against someone, we do the same thing they did to us: hurt us. They hurt us once. We hurt ourselves 100x by repeating it in our heads.

- It takes effort to find love. It takes effort to feel fulfilled. It takes effort to be fit. It takes effort to be happy. Which is why most of us do not have love, fulfilment, happiness or fitness in our life.

- How we treat others is a reflection of how we treat ourselves. Truly happy, fulfilled and soaring people never ever make others feel bad about themselves. The inner world drives the outer. Period.


Freitag, 13. Dezember 2024

Can’t hurt me – David Goggins

 

-          We are addicted to comfort

-          We all make habitual, self-limiting choices

-          Motivation is not enough

-          Only you can master your mind, which is what it takes to live a bold life

-          Self-mastery and empower you to face reality, hold yourself accountable

-          I thought I was gaming the system (by cheating, taking abbreviations), but in reality the whole time, I’d been gaming myself

-          Everyone’s opinion of me mattered to me, and that’s a shallow way to live

-          Nobody is coming to save you! Nobody! It’s up to you

-          For the first time, I’d held myself accountable

-          I’d duped myself into a negative feedback loop that on the surface looked like advancement until I hit a brick wall called reality

-          So why are you still lying to yourself?

o   You’ve been living like a coward. Period. Tell yourself the truth

-          YOU are stopping YOU

o   You are giving up instead of getting hard!

o   Turn that negativity into jet fuel

o   No more time to waste

o   It’s okay to be cruel to yourself as long as you realize you’re doing it to become better.

-          I looked at the people who were making me feel uncomfortable and realized how uncomfortable they were in their own skin.

o   It was a clear indication that something was very wrong with them, not me.

o   But when you have no confidence it becomes easy to value other people’s opinions

o   As soon as I made that connection, being upset with them was not worth my time

-          Personal accountability brought me self-respect, and self-respect will always light a way forward

-          Make a stand and start walking the path of most resistance

-          I first realized that not all physical and mental limitations are real. I had a habit of giving up way too soon

-          Convince myself that all that self-doubt and anxiety was confirmation that I was no longer living an aimless life. I was on a mission

-          Do something that sucks every day

o   The more often you get uncomfortable the stronger you’ll become

o   Can-do dialogue with yourself in stressful situations

-          I stopped seeing myself as the victim of bad circumstance, and saw my life as the ultimate training ground instead

o   The same principle works when it comes to mindset. Until you experience hardships like failures and disappointments, your mind will remain soft and exposed. Life experience, especially negative experiences, help callous the mind.

-          Very few people even bother to try to control the way their thoughts and doubts bubble up. The vast majority of us are slaves to our minds

o   Mastering their thought process it a never-ending chore and impossible to get right every time.

o   Physical training is the perfect crucible to learn how to manage your thought process because when you’re working out, your focus is more likely to be single pointed, and your response to stress and pain is immediate and measurable. Do you hammer hard and snag that personal best like you said you would, or do you crumble?

§  It’s almost always a test of how well you are managing your own mind.

§  It’s important to push hardest when you want to quit the most

§  You have to do your best work when you are the least motivated

-          It’s up to you to go back through your past and make peace with yourself

-          Staying in the fight is always the hardest and most rewarding first step

-          in every failure there is something to be gained, even if its only practice for the next test you’ll have to take. Because that next test is coming. That’s a guarantee.

-          Made me realize that there is a whole other level of athlete out there in the world, and that some of that was inside me, too. In fact, it’s in all of us.

-          Who hasn’t dreamed up a possibility for themselves only to have friends, colleagues or family ridicule it? Most of us are extremely motivated to do anything to pursue our dreams until those around us remind us of the danger, the downside, our own limitations, and all the people before us that didn’t make it.

-          Goggins laws of nature

o   You will be made fun of

o   You will feel insecure

o   You may not be the best all the time

o   You may be the only… (black, white, male, Asian, gay, or… whatever) in a give situation

o   There will be times when you will feel alone

 

o   GET OVER IT

-          Our minds are strong

-          If you want to be one of the few to defy those trends in our ever-softening society, you will have to be willing to go to war with yourself and create a whole new identity, which requires an open mind.

o   You’ll have to become addicted to hard work. Because passion and obsession are only useful tools if you have the work ethics to back them up

o   It means scheduling your life like you’re on a twenty-four-hour mission every single day

o   He makes time to get it all in by minimizing the amount of nonsense clogging his schedule. His priorities are clear and he remains dedicated to his priorities.

o   Evaluate your life in its totality! We all waste so much time doing meaningless things. We burn hours on social media and watching televisions, which by the end of the year would add up to entire days and weeks if you tabulated time

-          Build an optimal schedule

o   When you work, only work on one thing at a time, think about the task in front of you and pursue it relentlessly

o   Scheule in exercise and rest, too. When it’s time to rest, actually rest. No checking email or wasting time on social media. If you are going to work hard you must also rest your brain

o   You should have a working schedule that maximizes your effort without sacrificing sleep.

-          Always be willing to embrace ignorance and become the idiot in the classroom again, because that is the only way to expand your body of knowledge and body of work. It’s the only way to expand your mind.

-          A lot of us surround ourselves with people who speak to our desire for comfort. People who would rather treat the pain of our wounds and prevent further injury than help us callous over them and try again.            

o   We need to surround ourselves with people who will tell us what we need to hear, not what we want to hear

-          All I’s ever wanted from it was to become successful in my own eyes.

Mittwoch, 4. Dezember 2024

So good they cant ignore you - Cal Newport

  • Believing that the key to happiness is identifying your true calling and then chasing after it with all the courage you can muster. This belief is frighteningly naive.
    • The reality was, nothing had changed. I was exactly the same person, with the same worries and anxieties
  • Why do some people end up loving what they do, while so many others fail at this goal?
  • The importance of ability: You need something rare and valuable to offer in return. You need to be good at something before you can expect a good job.
  • move your focus away from finding the right work and toward working right
  • It takes time to get good at anything
    • The key thing is to force yourself through the work; force the skills to come; thats the hardest part
    • work is hard, so suck it up.
    • A job is a way to pay the bills, a career is a path toward increasingly better work, a calling is work thats an important part of your life and a vital part of your identity
    • it seems that the type of work alone does not necessarily predict how much people enjoy it
    • the strongest predictor of an assistant seeing her work as a calling was the number of years spent on the job. In other words, the more experience an assistant had, the more likely she was to love her work.
  • Nutriments required to feel intrinsically motivated for your work:
    • Autonomy, competence, relatedness
  • All jobs include difficult responsibilities
  • Nobody ever takes note of my advice, because its not the answer they wanted to hear
  • I track the hours spent each month dedicated to thinking hard about research problems
    • This hour-tracking strategy helped turn my attention back above all else to the quality of what I produce
  • The craftsman mindset
    • leave behind self-centered concerns about whether your job is just right and instead put your head down and plug away at getting really damn good. No one owes you a great career, you need to earn it - and the process wont be easy.
    • Turn your focus toward becoming so good they cant ignore you
    • Approach your work like a true performer
    • You adopt the craftsman mindset first and THEN the passion follows
  • Building up Career capital
    • if you want a great job, you need to build up rare and valuable skills - career capital
    • Traits that define great work:
      • Creativity / Impact / Control
    • The key thing is to force yourself through the work, force the skills to come, thats the hardest part
    • you need to get good in order to get good things in your working life, and the craftsman mindset is focused on achieving exactly this goal.
    • Mike literally tracks every hour of his day, down to quarter-hour increments, on a spreadsheet
    • Constantly stretch himself beyond what was comfortable
    • Hours spent in serious study dominated all other factors (case study chess improvement)
    • Deliberate practice provides the key to excellence
    • scientists failed to find much evidence of natural abilities explaining experts successes
    • a never-ending thirst to get better
    • like a sport, you have to practice and you have to study
    • The easiest thing to do is to show up to work in the morning and just respond to email the whole day, that is not the most strategic way to spend your time.
    • The important stuff still finds its way to him, but on his schedule
    • The majority of his week is instead focussed on what matter... instead of whats immediate
    • Deliberate practice is often the opposite of enjoyable
    • If you're not uncomfortable, then you're probably stuck at an "acceptable level"
    • Diligence
    • Your willingness to ignore other pursuits that pop up along the way to distract you
    • Acquiring capital can take time
    • You stretch yourself, day after day, month after month, before finally looking up and realizing "Hey I've become pretty good, and people are starting to notice."
  • Getting control
    • Control has been found to improve peoples lives
    • no result, no job
    • Giving people more control over what they do and how they do it increases their happiness, engagement, and sense of fulfillment
    • A hard truth of the real work: It's really hard to convince people to give you money.
    • People tell me that I dont do things the way other people do... But I tell them, I'm not other people
    • The point at which you have acquired enough career capital to get meaninful control over your working life is exactly the point when you've become valuable enough to your current employer that they will try to prevent you from making the change
      • In most jobs you should expect your employer to resist your move toward more control
    • I have this principle about money that overrides my other life rules - do what people are willing to pay for. Money is a neutral indicator of value. By aiming to make money, youre aiming to be valuable
    • When it comes to decisions affecting your core career, money remains an effective judge of value.
    • Her first big move, to drop to a thirty-hour-per-week schedule
  • Innovation and mission
    • We like to think of innovation as striking us in a stunning eureka moment
    • In reality, innovation is more systematic
    • Adjacent possibilities to tackle
    • If you want to identify a mission, you must first get to the cutting edge
      • and this is hard - the type of hardness that most of us try to avoid in our working lives
    • Most people who love their work got where they are by first building up career capital and then cashing it in for the types of traits that define great work.
    • Advancing to the cutting edge in a field is an act of small thinking, requiring you to focus on a narrow collection of subjects for a potentially long time
    • Once you discover a mission in the adjacent possible, you must go after it with zeal: a "big" action
    • A small series of little bets about what might be a good direction, learning critical information from lots of little failures and from small but significant wins. Rapid and frequent feedbacks
  • The art of building things worth noticing
  • "Remarkable"
    • a good mission-drive project, compelling people to remark about it
  • Most knowledge workers avoid the uncomfortable strain of deliberate practice like the plague, a reality emphasized by the typical cubicle dwellers ovsessive email-checking habit
  • How to...
    • the first type was TIME STRUCTURE
      • I am going to work on this for one hour
    • 2nd type INFORMATION STRUCTURE
      • capturing the results of my hard focus in a useful form
      • I would conclude by writing a detailed summary in my own words
    • Strain, I now accepted, was good
    • I began to understand it the same way that a body builder understands muscle burn
    • HOUR TALLY
      • Total number of hous i've spent that month in a state of deliberate practice
      • By having these hour counts stare me in the face every day I'm motivated to find new ways to fit more deliberate practice into my scheule.
  • What
    • I try to keep only two or three bets active at a time (Small projects
      • Small enough to be completed in less than a month
      • Forces you to create new value
      • Produces a concrete result and concrete feedback

Montag, 2. Dezember 2024

Cal Newport - Deep work

 

-          Transform the rest of your time – be more present

-          Work that happens when we refuse to avert our eyes

-          Resist the corporate groupthink of constant connectivity

-          Practice of addin meditation rooms to homes – In my retiring room I am by myself.

-          Two hours of undistracted writing time

-          Average knowledge worker now spends more than 60 percent of the workweek engaged in electronic communication. 30 % to reading and answering mails

o   I have now blocked 1h per workday. This is 13%

o   Like human network routers (pinging messages back and forth and around) vs. forming a new business strategy or writing an important grant application

-          Shallow work

-          Spend enough time in a state of frenetic shallowness and you PERMANENTLY reduce your capacity to perform deep work!!!!!!

o   Chipping away my capacity for concentration and contemplation

-          Learning something complex like computer programming requires intense uninterrupted concentration on cognittivley demanding concepts

-          Most knowledge workers have lost their ability to perform deep work

o   Always getting on the internet and checking my emails

o   Compulsion

o   Periods free from electronic distraction

-          On good days, I can get in four hours of focus before the first meeting. Then maybe another three to four hours in the afternoon.

o   No email, no hacker news, just programming

-          To remain valuable in our economy therefore, you must master the art of quickly learning complicated things.

-          You’re likely to fall behind as technology advances

-          If you can create something useful, its reachable audience is essentially limitless

-          To succeed you have to produce the absolute best stuff you’re capable of producing – a task that requires depth.

-          Deep work is becoming a key currency

-          The superpower of the 21st century

-          Increasing scarcity of deep work and the other about its increasing value

-          The deep work hypothesis: The ability to perform deep work is becoming increasingly rare at exactly the same time it is becoming increasingly valuable in our economcy. As a consequence, the few who cultivate this skill, and then makeit the core of their working life, will thrive.

-          Training your brain and transforming your work habits to place deep work at the core of your professional life.

-          While rarely working past five pm

-          I’ve invested significant effort to minimize the shallow in my life. I build my days around a core of carefully chosen deep work, with the shallow activities I absolutely cannot avoid batched into smaller burstst at the peripheries of my schedule.

o   Three to four hous a day, five days a week, of uninterrupted and carefully directed concentration, it turns out, can produce a lot of valuable output

-          I don’t touch a computer between the time when I get home from work and the next morning.

-          Read a surprising number of books

-          The lack of distraction in my life tones down that background hum of nervous mental energy that seems to increasingly pervade peoples daily lives. I am comfortable being bored.

-          A deep life is a good life

-          Two core abilities for thriving in the new economy

o   The ability to quickly master hard things

o   The ability to produce at an elite level, in terms of both quality and speed

-          We’ve been spoiled by the intuitive and drop-dead-simple user experience

o   They are consumer products, not serious tools

-          Requires that you hone your ability to master hard things

o   This process of mastering hard things never ends: You must be able to do it quickly, again and again

o   If you cant learn, you can thrive

-          Now consider the second core ability: producing at an elite level

o   You must transform latent potential into tangible results that people value.

o   If you don’t product, you wont thrive – no matter how skilled or talented you are

-          High-Quality work produced = (Time Spent) * (Intensity of Focus)

o  

-          Very best students often studied less than the group of students right below them

o   Maximize their concentration

-          Multitasking is bad – a residue of your attention remains stuck thinking about the original task

o   Even worse – by seeing messages that you cannot deal with at the moment, you’ll be forced to turn back to the primary task with a secondary task left unfinished

-          To produce at your peak level you need to work for extended periods with full concentration on a single task free from distraction

-          The scrum project management replaces a lot of this ad hoc messaging with regular, highly structured, and ruthlessly efficient status meetings. This approach frees up more managerial time for thinking deeply about the problems their teams are tackling

-          Deep work is rare

o   Big trends in business today actively decrease peoples ability to perform deep work

§  Open offices

§  Instant messenger systems are meant to be always active

§  Culture of connectivity – one is expected to read and respond to e-mails (and related communication) quickly

§  The common practice of setting up regularly occurring meetings for projects

-          We tend towards behaviour that are easiest in the moment (now I am in plane – watching a movie is tempting – no one is watching me. I don’t have to do / to deliver anything,…)

o   It has become acceptable to run your day out of your inbox, all the while feeling satisfyingly productive.

o   If email were to move to the periphery of your workday, youd be required to deploy a more thoughtful approach to figuring out what you should be working on and for how long (!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!)

-          Emails: why are avoidable and time-sucking emails so common? From the senders perspective, they’re easy!!!

-          Busyness as proxy for productivity

-          Feynman was adamant in avoiding administrative duties

-          Knowledge worker want to prove that theyre productive members of the team and are earning their keep, but theyre not entirely clear what this goal constitutes. They have no rising h-index or rack of repaired motorcycles to point to as evidence of their worth

o   Knowledge workers are tending toward increasingly visible busyness because they lack a better way to demonstrate their value

-          Busyness as Proxy for Productivitiy: In the absence of clear indicators of what it means to be productive and valuable in their jobs, many knowledge workers turn back toward an industrial indicator of productivity: doing lots of stuff in a visible manner

o   If you send and answer emails at all hours, if you schedule and attend meetings constantly, if you weigh in on instant message systems, roam your open office bouncing ideas off all whom you encounter – all of these behaviors make you seem busy in a public manner.

-          We no longer see Internet tools as products released by for-profit companies, funded by investors hoping to make a return

-          To support deep work often requires the rejection of much of what is new and high-tech. (And here I am typing this on my laptop)

-          We should not be surprised that deep work struggles to compete against the shiny thrum of tweets, likes, tagged photos, walls, posts, and all the other behaviors that were now taught are necessary for no other reason than that they exist

-          The realities that deep work is hard and shallow work is easier. In the absence of clear goals for your job, the visible busyness that surrounds shallow work becomes self-preserving

-          Systematically develop your personal ability to go deep – and by doing so, reap great rewards

-          Attention

o   The disease wanted to monopolize my attention, but as much as possible, I would focus on my life instead.

o   The skillfull management of attention is the sine qua non of the good life and the key to improving virtually every aspect of your experience

o   Our brains construct our worldview based on what we pay attention to

o   Who you are, what you think, feel, and do, what you love – is the sum of what you focus on

o   Rewire your brain to ignore the negative and savor the positive. By skillfully managing your attention, you improve your world without changing anything concrete about it.

o   The habit of frequently checking inboxes ensures that these issues remain at the forefront of your attention. It ensures that your mind will construct an understanding of your working life that’s dominated by stress, irritation, frustration, and triviality. The world represented by your inbox, in other words, isn’t a pleasant world to inhabit.

o   A workday driven by the shallow, from a neurological perspective, is likely to be a draining and upsetting day, even if most of the shallow things seem harmless or fun

o   Multitasking

§  Cant filter out irrelevancy

§  Constantly distracted

§  Mental wrecks

§  They’ve developed habits of mind that make it impossible for them to be laser-focused. They just cant keep on task

§  Once your brain has become accustomed to on-demand distraction, its hard to shake the constant addiction

§  If every moment of potential boredom in your life is relieved with a quick glance at your smartphone, then your brain has likely been rewired to a point where its not ready for deep work – even if you regularly schedule time to practice this concentration.

§  Once you are wired for distraction, you crave it

-          Concentration

o   The advantage of cultivating concentration so intense that there is no attention left over to think about anything irrelevant, or to worry about problems.

o   Regularly resting your brain improves the quality of your deep work. When you work, work hard. When youre done, be done.

o   Give yourself plenty of opportunities throughout your evening to resist switching to these distractions

§  Gird yourself for the temporary boredom, fight through it with only the company of your thoughts. To simply wait and be bored has become a novel experience in modern life, but from the perspective of concentration training, its incredibly valuable

o   Reddy Roosevelt – his concentration was so intense, and his reading so rapid

o   Bill Gates when coding Microsoft coded nonstop – fell asleep on keyboard

o   Working with great intensity

§  No email breaks, no daydreaming, no browsing, no repeated trips to coffee machine.

§  Attack the task with every free neuron until it gives way under your unwavering barrage of concentration

§  Giving your brain practice with intensity

§  The more you practice resisting such urges, the easier such resistance becomes

o   Productive meditation

§  Walking, jogging, driving, showering – and focus your attention on a single well-defined professional problem.

§  You must continue to bring your attention back to the problem at hand when it wanders or stalls

§  Rapidly improve your ability to think deeply

§  It requires practice to do well

§  Your minds first act of rebellion will be to offer unrelated but seemingly more interesting thoughts.

§  When you notice your attention slipping away from the problem at hand, gently remind yourself that you can return to that thought later, then redirect your attention back

·         (Thoughts are like trains that constantly invite the attention to join and come with them – say thanks. let them pass)

§  Your mind will attempt to avoid excess expenditure of energy when possible

§  Avoiding diving deeper into the problem by instead looping over and over again on what you already know about it

-          Flow

o   The best moments usually occur when a persons body or mind is stretched to its limits in a voluntary effort to accomplish something difficult and worthwhile

o   Most people assume that relaxation makes them happy. We want to work less and spend more time in the hammock

§  BUT jobs are actually easier to enjoy than free time. Goals, feedback rules and challenges. Free time is unstructured, and requires much greater effort to be shaped into something that can be enjoyed

§  When measure empirically, people were happier at work and less happy relaxing than they suspected.

§  Human beings, it seems, are at their best when immersed deeply in something challenging.

-          Work

o   Your work is craft. If you hone your ability and apply it with respect and care, you can generate meaning in the daily efforts of your professional life.

o   Transform knowledge work from a distracted, draining obligation into something satisfying – a portal to a world full of shining, wondrous things (!!!)

-          Behaviours

o   People fight desires all day long!

o   Desire turns out to be the norm, not the exception

o   Desires

§  Eating, sleeping and sex

§  Taking a break

§  Checking email

§  Checking social media

§  Surfing the web

§  Listening to music

§  Watching television

o   You can expect to be bombarded with the desire to do anything but work deeply throughout your day

-          Willpower

o   You have a finite amount of willpower that becomes depleted as you use it

o   It’s a muscle that tires

o   Unless youre smart about your habits

o   Move beyond good intentions and add routines and rituals to your working life designed to minimize the amount of your limited willpower necessary to transition into and mainatain a state of unbroken concentration.

o   A set time and quiet location used for your deep tasks each afternoon

§  Lock himself every morning into a minimally appointed room to write without interruption

§  Divide your time, dedicating some clearly defined stretches to deep pursuits and leaving the rest open to everything else

·         Can be one week blocked out of office

·         Can be a part of a day

·         Once or twice a month, take a period of two to four days to become completely monastic. Shut the door. Put out-of-office response

-          Habit

o   The way to create better jokes was to write every day

o   Calendar on the wall – every day he crosses out the date on the calendar with a big red X

o   You’ll like seeing that chain

o   A rhythm that removes the need for you to invest energy in deciding if and when youre going to go deep

o   Eg deep work needed to happen in ninety-minute chunks

o   Eg wake up and start working by 5:30 every morning

o   I map out when I’ll be working deeply during each week at the beginning of the week

o   I trained myself to be organized – even what I wear to the office

o   Build rituals of the same level of strictness and idiosyncrasy

o   You need to support your efforts to go deep

§  Specific timeframe

§  Door shut

§  Desk cleaned

§  Coffee / drink / snack prepared

§  Craft your deep work ritual

-          I know WHAT I need to do, but not HOW to do it

-          The more you try to do, the less you actually accomplish

o   Stop starting, start finishing!

o   A small number of wildly important goals

o   You should identify a small number of ambitious outcomes to pursue with your deep work hours – a specific goal

o   don’t try to say “no” to trivial distractions, try to say “yes” to the subject that arouses a terrifying longing

-          Track deep work hours – visibly – eg whiteboard

-          Attention restoration – work vs free time

o   Spending time in nature improves your ability to concentrate

o   Reaching the levels of deeper relaxation in which attention restoration can occur. Only the conficence that you’re done with work until the next day can convince your brain to sownshift to the level where it can begin to recharfe for the next day to follow.

o   Maintain a strict endpoint to your workday

§  Even a brief intrusion of work can generat a self-reinforcing stream of distraction that impedes the shut-down advantages

§  A strict shutdown ritual that you use at the end of the workday

§  Algorithmic

§  A series of steps you always conduct

§  Have a set phrase you say that indicates completion (to end my own ritual, I say “Shutdown complete”)

§  A simple cue to your mind that its safe to release work-related thoughts for the rest of the day

§  Incomplete tasks dominate our attention

·         They keep battling for your attention

·         There are ALWAYS tasks left incomplete. The idea that you can ever reach a point where all your obligations are handled is a fantasy.

·         Fortunately, we don’t need to complete a task to get if off our minds. Make a plan for how you later compete the task

o   Committing to a specific plan frees cognitive resources for other pursuits

·         Your mind is released from its duty to keep track of these obligations at every moment

·         Your mind needs to trust your ritual enough to actually begin to release work-related thoughts in the evening

§  Give yourself plenty of opportunities throughout your evening to resist switching to these distractions at the slightest hint of boredom

§  Gird yourself for the temporary boredom. Fight through it with only the company of your thoughts. To simply wait and be bored has become a novel experience in modern life, but form the perspective of concentration training, its incredibly valuable

o   Put more thought into your leisure time

§  Dedicate some advanced thinking to the question of how you want to spend your “day within a day” (the 16 hours you are not working).

·         Addictive webpages thrive in a vacuum: If you haven’t given yourself something to do in a given moment, they’ll always beckon as an appealing option

§  Structured hobbies

§  A set program of reading

§  Exercise

§  Good (in-person) company

o   We spend much of our day on autopilot – not fibbing much thought to what were doing with our time – this is a problem.

§  Difficult to prevent the trivial from creeping into every corner of your schedule

§  Ask yourself: What makes the most sense right now

o   Goal of not working past a certain time

§  Then work backwards to find productivity strategies that allow to satisfy this declaration

-          Working productively

o   Schedule every minute of your day!

§  Give every minute of your time a job

o   You can batch similar things into more generic “task blocks”

§  On a page you list out the full set of small tasks you plan to accomplish in that block

o   This type of scheduling is about thoughtfulness

§   A simple habit that forces you to continually take a moment throughout your day and ask: “What makes sense for me to do with the time that remains?”

§  Without structure, its esy to allow your time to devolve into the shallow – email, social media, web surfing

o   Deep work habit requires you to treat YOUR time with RESPECT

§  Maximize your ROT – Return on time

§  What percentage of my time should be spent on shallow work?

·         Ask your boss

§  Budget this

·         This budget might lead you to drop the need for a weekly status meeting (“let me know when you have made significant progress, then we’ll talk”)

§  Start spending more mornings in communication isolation

§  These changes are all positive for your quest to make deep work central to your working life

o   I am incredibly cautious about my use of the most dangerous word in ones productivity vocabulatory: “yes”. It takes a lot to convince me to agree to something that yields shallow work.

o   Make people who send you email do more work

§  Emails often take the sender long to craft but they would require a lot of explanation and writing on my part to respond

§  The default social convention surrounding e-mail is that if someone sends you something, you owe him or her a response

§  Most people easily accept the idea that you have a right to control YOUR OWN incoming communication

§  The notion that all messages, regardless of purpose or sender deserves a timely response is absurdly unproductive

§  Process centric response to email

·         I start by identifying the project implied in the message

o   Take a minute to think through a process that gets us from the current state to a desired outcome with a minimum of messages required.

o   Write a reply that clearly describes this process and where we stand

o   Close the loop – otherwise squats in your mental landscape, something that’s “on your plate”

o   More mental resources available for deep thinking

o   Don’t respond

§  Famous academics: their default behaviour when receiving an email is to not respond

§  When it comes to email they believe it’s the senders responsibility to convince the receiver that a reply is worthwhile

o   Develop the habit of letting small bad things happen (eg because of ignoring many mails and meetings). If you don’t, youll never find time for the life-changing big things

o   People are quick to adjust their expectations to the specifics of your communication habits

o   Sending emails generates more emails

o   You send less emails and ignore more mails it will all become much more easy

-          I started to take extended lunch breaks in the middle of the day to go for a run and then eat lunch back at my apartment

-          Carefully block out deep work hours and preserve them against incursion

-          Developed an ability to carefully work through thoughts during the many hours I spent on foot each week

-          Finding disconnected locations conductive to focus. – library

-          Push this habit to the extreme. Ruthless in turning down time-consuming commitments. Work more in isolated locations outside the office

-          Habit of working on problems in my head whenever a good time presented itself – walking the dog or commuting

-          Deep work is WAY MORE powerful than most people understand

o   A transformative experience

o   The deep life

o   Requires hard work and drastic changes to your habits.

o   If youre willing to struggle to deploy your mind to its fullest capacity to create things that matter – depth generates a life rich with productivity and meaning.