This is the first post in a series on the idea of clarity and, specifically, what it is, why I want it, and how I’m developing it.

Clarity vs. Opacity

Clarity is awesome and I want more of it.

I use the word clarity in a pretty broad way:

Clarity is coherence; intelligibility; sharpness; ease of seeing, hearing, knowing; transparency.

Having clarity about your physical fitness would mean knowing exactly how fit you are, what is improving your fitness or not, your standing and active heart rates, etc.

Why want clarity?

Well… because it’s pretty obviously badass.

I want clarity in every part of my life. I want to know what makes me happy (and do more of those things), how my body language affects my social interactions (and make sure it’s positive), how my mindset affects my life (and how to change it), how to make and save money (and how to best spend it), why certain situations annoy me (and how to avoid them), what causes me stress (and how to deal with it), where anger comes from, how to make good decisions, what my priorities are, etc. etc.

Why? Because it’s interesting, but also because it’s useful: you can’t make things better without knowing how they are in the present.

I wanna know this stuff, both intrinsically (for its own sake) and extrinsically (because it’s useful to achieving the other things I want and living a generally better life).

(If you don’t share this desire, you probably won’t enjoy the rest of this post, or this series.)

Clarity isn’t knowing everything. A big part of clarity is being aware of what you don’t know (which is a lot of stuff). It’s about having a very grounded awareness of the way things are: what exists in your life, what’s around you, what’s going on in your brain and other brains. I don’t just want the comfort that comes from thinking I know all these things, I want real, useful, practical accuracy.

Opacity is the polar opposite of clarity:

Opacity is cloudiness; blurriness; haziness; a lack of transparency; obscurity in meaning; dullness; unintelligibility; incomprehensibility; abstruseness.

You get the idea. Opacity sucks. I want as much clarity in my life as possible.

So, what in my life is opaque?

I figure this questions is a good starting point for this entire project, because it will help give some direction and organization to my future posts.

Here are a bunch of examples of the things in my life that are opaque—or at the very least less clear than I would like them to be:

Physical (External)

  • What do I own, and why do I own it?
  • Do any of my possessions hold me down? What can I get rid of?
  • What things should I buy to make my life better?
  • How mobile am I? How mobile do I want to be?
  • How much money am I making?
  • What is my minimum acceptable income?
  • What is the current state of my finances?
  • Where am I spending my money?
  • When should I be trading time for money, and vice versa?

Physical (Internal)

  • How healthy am I?
  • Which things drain my energy the most?
  • What is my peak physical performance?
  • What is my standing heart rate?
  • What is the quality of my sleep?

Social

  • How skilled am I at extroversion?
  • What do other people think of me?
  • What body language do I use?
  • How does my clothing/style affect my social interactions?
  • How do social interactions affect my energy levels?
  • Do I communicate well?
  • Do I correctly interpret others’ physical and non-physical communication?
  • What relationships do I currently have?
  • How good are they? Are they worthwhile? How can I make them better?

Mental

  • What in my life is opaque?
  • What do I actually value?
  • What do I give a crap about?
  • What are my priorities?
  • What are my core values?
  • What are my favorite memories?
  • Where am I likely to confuse the map and the territory?
  • What should I be working on right now?
  • What am I avoiding?
  • What are my strengths and weaknesses?
  • Do I overly dwell on the past?
  • Have I given up hope for a better yesterday?
  • What makes me angry?
  • What causes me stress?
  • What makes me happy?
  • What motivates me?
  • What excites me?
  • What inspires me?
  • Am I distinguishing importance vs. urgency?
  • How much productive time do I have in a day?
  • What drains my mental energy quickest?
  • What’s my low-hanging self-improvement fruit?
  • Am I focusing on limitations instead of opportunities?
  • Do I notice cognitive dissonance as it occurs?
  • How often am I overconfident?
  • How well-calibrated is my uncertainty?
  • What is my default mindset?
  • Am I taking responsibility?
  • How should I make decisions when there is a lot of uncertainty?
  • Am I asking valuable questions?
  • Do I seek true beliefs or merely reassurance?
  • Do I make effective plans?
  • Am I strategic?
  • Am I treating all failures as feedback?
  • Am I sweating the small stuff?

This is a very rough list; merely a starting point. As time goes on I plan to systematically answer as many clarity-related questions as I can. I’ll be starting with some of the easier low-hanging fruit, and the things that I’ve already made some progress on, before delving into the more challenging opacities.

Summary: I want clarity in my life, because it’s awesome. This list is a first-pass brain-dump of questions to answer in the pursuit of clarity.

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Post image for Linchpin by Seth Godin

I recently finished reading Seth Godin’s book Linchpin.

I loved it. It’s packed with loads of useful stuff. Here are just a few of the key ideas:

  • The linchpin is indispensable.
  • Everyone’s an artist now.
  • Real artists ship.
  • There is no map.
  • Make real choices.
  • Never wait for someone to tell you what to do.
  • Make your own map.

The book is a call to action to take responsibility for your work, make yourself valuable, turn your work into an ‘art’, and lead rather than wait to be told what to do.

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Post image for Anki Deck: Linchpin

I just added a new deck to my Anki Decks page:  Linchpin .

This is a deck based on Seth Godin’s 2010 book Linchpin.

How to Use It

Grab it here:  Linchpin(You’ll need Anki. If you’re new to Anki you might find my Anki Essentials guide useful.)

There are 123 cards based on the key ideas in the book. Some examples (bold texts are cloze deletions):

  • real artists ship
  • three words that kill organizations: “not my job
  • leading is a skill, not a gift
  • the linchpin is indispensable
  • what linchpins do with fear: feel it, acknowledge it, proceed
  • I don’t need more genius, I need less resistance
  • never wait for someone else to tell me what to do
  • I have a limited number of brain cycles to spend each day
  • art is the act of navigating without a map
  • I will fail, and often
  • trying and failing is better than merely failing
  • you can’t fit in and stand out

Sample Card

linchpin-anki-deck-example

See also my Linchpin book notes and book summary.

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Post image for Linchpin by Seth Godin – Summary & Notes

This post contains my rough notes for Seth Godin’s book Linchpin: Are You Indispensable?

My Summary

  • The linchpin is indispensable.
  • Everyone’s an artist now.
  • Real artists ship.
  • There is no map.
  • Make choices.
  • Never wait for someone to tell me what to do.
  • Make my own map.
  • Let my work be an art.
  • Always give more than I take.
  • Humans are made to give, not receive.
  • Useful questions to ask yourself:
    • “What is my art?”
    • “What should I do next?”
    • “What am I resisting?”
    • “Why am I resisting?”
    • “What do I fear?”
    • “I can’t … or I don’t want to?”
    • “What would make me impossibly good at my job?”
    • “How can I be more artistic, motivated, aware, and genuine?”
    • “Am I moving?”
    • “Am I exerting emotional labor?”

INTRODUCTION

You are a genius.

A genius looks at something that others are stuck on and gets the world unstuck.

Nobody is a genius all the time.

Einstein had trouble finding his house when he walked home from work every day.

Society drums the genius part out.

This book is about love and art and change and fear. It’s about overcoming a multigenerational conspiracy designed to sap your creativity and restlessness. It’s about leading and making a difference and it’s about succeeding.

The current system is a mess.

This book answers the question: where does success come from?

You can train yourself to matter.

The first step: acknowledge that this is a skill, and like most skills, you can (and will) get better at it.

Every day, if you focus on the gifts, art, and connections that characterize the linchpin, you’ll become a little more indispensable.

THE NEW WORLD OF WORK

The compliant masses don’t help much when you don’t know what to do next.

We need indispensable human beings. [click here to keep reading…]