Sometimes the simplest ideas really stick out.

This was particularly true for me when I read Tim Ferriss’s The 4-Hour Workweek. I pulled a bunch of good ideas from his book, but one in particular that stands above the rest is this: a lack of time is a lack of priorities.

I think this idea has improved my life over the last few years more than any other tidbit of productivity or life hacking advice.

Most often, a lack of time—time pressures, rushing, scrambling to finish things, busyness—is simply a lack of priorities. We can choose to spend our time differently, on the things that are more important, and ditch the things that aren’t, thereby freeing up our time and energy.

We choose to be busy or rushed, and we can choose otherwise.

Smart vs. Lazy

Many people are strongly averse to this idea, thinking a lack of busyness equates to laziness.

I’m with Tim on this one. Being busy isn’t an inherently bad thing. Sometimes I choose to be busy, because a lot of things are important to me and I want to get them all done. Sometimes I like being busy because I love what I’m working on and I’m getting a lot done.

But most of the time we can simply choose to not be busy. Yes, this means less important things won’t get done, gasp! But… if they’re less important, who cares? This isn’t lazy, this is smart.

Problems with busyness arise when we feel like victims. “Gawd, if only I wasn’t so busy I would do xyz instead.” But, if it’s actually more important, why not do that instead. And if it’s not as important, stop stressing over not doing it!

Would you rather complete less important things and be busy and stressed all the time, or would you rather focus on what’s important, not caring for the unimportant, and having a more relaxing and less stressed life?

I’m sure Tim isn’t the first person to have this insight, but he was the first one to tell me about it in such a “slap-in-the-face-and-pay-attention!” sorta way.

It’s a surprisingly simple idea. It’s also surprisingly difficult to live in practice.

Importance vs. Urgency

It’s easy to confuse importance with urgency. That rush job that’s stressing everyone out? Sure, it’s due tomorrow—it’s urgent. But is it important? Would time be better spent on something else? Should you just drop it and do your taxes instead?

Urgency is useful for picking between important tasks, but ultimately the importance of a task is much more… important… than anything else.

Knowing Your Priorities

Without a clear sense of priorities you’ll have difficulties deciding where to best spend your time and energy.

If you don’t know your priorities it’s probably worth your time to sit down and think about it. You’d be amazed what you can come up with in just five minutes of conscious effort.

From “Must Do” to “Choose To”

There is nothing in the world that we truly must do. We can choose to do or not do just about anything. ((Except when our automatic System 1 does things that our “conscious” System 2 can’t control or override.)) Take wearing clothes in public. It sure feels like you have to do it—and if you’re like me you want to do it too—but you don’t actually have to.

I found this idea very hard to internalize at first.

Let’s say you feel that you have to complete an important assignment. If I say, “You don’t have to do it, you can choose to do it or not,” you’ll probably think, “Okay, that’s true… but it still feels like I have to do it!”

This can be so deeply engrained in your psyche that it will take a long time to fix. I’m not entirely sure what helped me move away from “must” thinking to “choice” thinking; it’s been such a gradual change over time.

Being aware of the distinction is probably the place to start. If you can constantly remind yourself that you choose to do the things that you do, you’ll slowly shift away from “must” thinking.

Accepting Responsibility

One consequence of shifting to “choose” thinking is the sudden burden of responsibility. If you’re not ready to accept that how you spend your time, and how you set your priorities, is ultimately your own responsibility, you’ll never escape the busyness trap.

Noticing Busyness

Over the last few years I’ve slowly improved my ability to notice that feeling of “If only I had more time!” or “I have too much to do!”

Whenever I catch myself reasoning along these lines I think, “Wait! I don’t have to be busy. What’s important here? What’s not? What else could I be doing with my time?” etc.

In other words: Pause. Reassess. Decide. Relax.

This has come in handy more times than I can count.

Note that I don’t always end up stress-free and relaxed. Many times I’ve consciously decided that I still want to do everything on my plate, even though I know I’ll be busy and probably burnt out by the end of it.

But at least I chose to do it that way, which makes the busyness much easier to bear.

Summary

You have all the time in the world to do what’s important.

Don’t have the time? Then drop something else to make the time.

Or, accept that it’s not important enough and move on.

Or, accept that you’ll voluntarily be busy for the next little while; that it’s a choice, not a burden.

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Post image for Anki Essentials is here!

It’s finally here! I’m excited to announce that Anki Essentials is ready and available for purchase here.

Anki Essentials is a 120-page guide for Anki, a free and popular spaced-repetition program primarily used for memorizing and internalizing material.

Head over here for more details and to grab a copy!

To everyone who pre-ordered Anki Essentials, thanks! You should have received an email by now with a link to guide. If not, please contact me and I’ll get everything sorted out.

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Post image for Anki Deck: Get Motivated

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

This is an experimental deck for getting yourself motivated using the advice from The Procrastination Equation by Piers Steel and my corresponding How to Get Motivated poster.

How to Use It

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

There is a card for every item on my procrastination poster with a specific “next action” for each. When you need to get motivated (i.e. stop procrastinating) load up this deck—which is broken down by each part of the procrastination equation in case know where the problem is and want to focus on it—and keep “studying” the cards until you’re motivated.

While studying, grade each card based on how effective it was. If it works well, you’ll want it to show up next time, so mark it as hard or even again. If it didn’t work well, grade it as easy so you won’t see it for a while.

My hope is that over time the most effective anti-procrastination techniques will be those with the most “lapses”, and those that don’t work will be “easiest” and so scheduled into the far future.

Sample Cards

It is also easy to add new anti-procrastination techniques as you discover them. If you have any to add, let me know!

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Finding Flow

The idea of flow is popular in the online productivity, life-hacking blogosphere.

Being in a state of flow is when you’re fully immersed in a specific task with a seemingly inexhaustible amount of focus. Five hours may zip by and you hardly even notice.

I’ve experienced flow on many occasions, such as when I get “in the zone” and program for 8 hours straight, or when I get consumed reading about a topic I find particularly interesting for a solid day.

In an effort to read up more about flow—primarily the pros and cons, and how to achieve states of flow more often—I read Finding Flow by Mihály Csíkszentmihályi (apparently it’s pronounced “chicks-send-me-high”), who first proposed the whole idea. ((Csikszentmihalyi, Mihaly (1998). Finding Flow: The Psychology of Engagement With Everyday Life. New York: Basic Books.))

What follows in this post are my rough book notes.

Chapter 1 – The Structures of Everyday Life

Psychic energy: mental awareness/attention/focus; a limited resource.

Work, maintenance, and leisure take up most of our psychic energy.

Chapter 2 – The Content of Experience

All emotions are essentially either positive/attractive or negative/repulsive.

Negative emotions create “psychic entropy” in the mind: states in which we cannot use attention effectively to deal with external tasks because we need to restore inner subjective order.

Excellent diagram of Challenges vs Skills:

 

It is the full involvement of flow, rather than happiness, that makes for excellence in life. ((p. 32))

[It] is possible to improve the quality of life by making sure that clear goals, immediate feedback, skills balanced to action opportunities, and the remaining conditions of flow are as much as possible a constant part of everyday life. ((p. 34))

Chapter 3 – How We Feel When Doing Things Differently

Work vs leisure vs maintenance tasks.

Basically, being in flow is a very good thing.

Chapter 4 – The Paradox of Work

Work generally takes up about third of our time available for living.

Chapter 5 – The Risks and Opportunities of Leisure

We are bad at spending our free time well.

Free time is more difficult to enjoy than work.

Leisure only improves ones life if one knows how to use it effectively… something we do not learn automatically.

Too much leisure time is spent doing things that don’t put is in flow: e.g. things that don’t challenge us.

Chapter 6 – Relationships and the Quality of Life

The most positive experiences people report are usually with friends.

The average person spends about one-third of their waking time alone.

Current studies provide consistent evidence that outgoing, extroverted people are happier, more cheerful, less stressed, more serene, more at peace with themselves than introverts. ((p. 94))

Note: it may be that the quality of experience is similar, but the reporting is different (introverted people seem more likely to be reserved in describing their inner states).

[Expressing] the full range from inner- to outer-directedness might be the normal way of being human. What is abnormal is to get boxed in at one of the ends of this continuum, and experience life only as a gregarious, or only as a solitary being. ((p.96))

Chapter 7 – Changing the Patterns of Life

Work

Things to do:

  • Find more value in your work; understand the “trivial” activity in the context of the whole.
  • Simple solution:

Without some effort a dull job will just stay dull. The basic solution is quite simple. It involves paying close attention to each step involved in the job, and then asking: Is this step necessary? Who needs it? If it is really needed, can it be done faster, better, more efficiently? What additional steps could make my contribution more valuable?

  • To turn a routine job one dreads into a professional performance one can look forward to with anticipation each morning:

First, one must pay attention so as to understand thoroughly what is happening and why; second, it is essential not to accept passively that what is happening is the only way to do the job; then one needs to entertain alternatives and to experiment with them until a better way is found.

Relationships

Find flow activities to do together.

Conversation

Find out what other’s goals are:

  • “What is he interested in at the moment?”
  • “What is she involved in?”
  • “What has he or she accomplished or is trying to accomplish?”

If any of it is worth pursuing: utilize your own expertise or experience on the topics raised by the other person—without trying to take over the conversation, but developing it jointly.

A good conversation is like a jam session in jazz, where one starts with conventional elements and then introduces spontaneous variations to create an exciting new composition.

Chapter 8 – The Autotelic Personality

The organization of the self that makes total commitment to a fully experienced life possible.

“Aautotelic” activity = one done for its own sake.

No one is fully autotelic, but there is gradation.

Key quality that distinguishes autotelic people: their psychic energy seems inexhaustible (though they don’t have more attentional capacity than anyone else). They:

  • pay more attention to what happens around them,
  • notice more,
  • are more willing to invest attention in things for their own sake without expecting an immediate return,
  • are less concerned about themselves and therefore have more free psychic energy with which to experience life.

Most of us are attention hoarders: we dole it out only for important things.

The result is that we don’t have much attention left over to participate in the world on its own terms, to be surprised, to learn new things, to empathize, to grow beyond the limits set by our self-centeredness.

Developing curiosity and interest: easy in principle, difficult in practice—but definitely worth trying!

(1) Develop the habit of doing whatever needs to be done with concentrated attention, with skill rather than inertia.

Even the most routine tasks, like washing dishes, dressing, or mowing the lawn become more rewarding if we approach them with the care it would take to make a work of art. ((p. 127))

(2) Transfer some psychic energy from tasks we don’t like doing, or from passive leisure, into something we never did before, or something we enjoy doing but don’t do often enough because it seems too much trouble.

There are literally millions of potentially interesting things in the world to see, to do, to learn about. But they don’t become actually interesting until we devote attention to them. ((p. 127))

Don’t think you have enough time? Change your priorities! (Think of Tim Ferriss: “busyness is a lack of priorities!”)

There is never a good excuse for being bored. ((p. 128))

The important thing is to enjoy the activity for its own sake, and to know that what matters is not the result, but the control one is acquiring over one’s attention. ((p. 129))

Normally, attention is directed by genetic instruction, social conventions, and habits we learned as children. Therefore, it is not we who decide what to become aware of, what information will reach consciousness. As a result, our lives are not ours in any meaningful sense; most of what we experience will have ben programmed for us. We learn what is supposed to be worths eyeing, what is not; what to remember and what to forget; what to feel when we see a bat, a flag, or a person who worships God by different rites; we learn what is supposed to be worth living and dying for. Through the years, our experience will follow the script written by biology and culture. The only way to take over the ownership of life is by learning to direct psychic energy in line with our own intentions. ((p. 130))

Chapter 9 – The Love of Fate

Whether we like it or not, our lives will leave a mark on the universe. ((p. 131))

A Buddhist piece of advice:

Act always as if the future of the Universe depended on what you did, while laughing at yourself for thinking that whatever you do makes a difference. ((p. 133))

Be engaged and carefree at the same time.

A simple way to improve the quality of your life is to take ownership of your actions.

The quality of life is much improved if we learn to love what we have to do. ((p. 139))

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