People often ask me about how I keep myself accountable and work on stuff without anyone pushing me to do so.
My answer is that I don’t bother with accountability. In fact, I’ve been deliberately organizing my life to remove as much accountability from it as I can.
1/13
Over the last few years I’ve been reflecting on the things that I do (or imagine myself doing), and categorize them as:
1) things that I do only because someone/something is pushing me to do them;
Or
2) things that I do for their own sake.
2/13
Then I started designing my lifestyle in ways that would allow me to do as little as possible from the first bucket, and as much as possible form the second.
And it’s a continuous process. The mix is much better this year than last year, but I intend to keep improving it.
3/13
So whenever I find myself reluctant to do something, I take that as a signal that I should probably be spending my energy on something else.
I don’t fight procrastination; I embrace it.
4/13
Or course, that tax return is not going to write itself. I still do many things that I’d rather not do. But just being cognizant of what I’m able to do on my own intrinsic drive is enough information to help me evolve my lifestyle to better match my preferences.
5/13
It always surprises me when I see people who make themself accountable even when they have no obligation to do so.
I’m very careful to not do that, even by accident.
6/13
For example, people often publicly commit to do something, in an attempt to force themselves to reach their goal.
And even when they don’t commit publicly, sometimes they just commit to themselves.
To me, that hurts my motivation more than it helps!
7/13
Because I find it very hard to fool myself that something is important if I get a hint from my subconscious that I might be doing this just because I’ve made a commitment.
8/13
My intrinsic drive doesn’t want to make me write a blog post just because I’ve committed to write an article every week. It wants me to spend my energy diligently, so it makes me stop to reconsider the reasons I’m doing what I’m doing.
And I think that’s good!
9/13
I also take deliberate measures to minimize the chance that I accidentally fall into this trap. For example, on my website I removed the blog post dates from the home page. I didn’t want to risk feeling the pressure to write something just to fill a date gap.
10/13
Similarly, I rarely open my GitHub profile, so that I don’t feel obligated to do something just to fill up the gray dots with green.
11/13
Another thing is that I try to be very unambitious. I do my best to keep the complexity of what I set myself to do abundantly within my means. And I keep adjusting and reducing the scope even after I start.
12/13
I think by now I developed a good sense of how far the finish line needs to feel in order for my intrinsic drive to keep giving me free energy. And whenever it starts to feel it’s a bit too far, I adjust the finish line. 🏁
13/13
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And this won’t just protect you against a bank run, but against anything that might happen to your primary account.
When I was moving to the US from Ireland 13yrs ago, my IE bank had a “technical issue” and froze everyone’s accounts for almost a month.
But I had redundancy.
Here’s the story for those curious. A bad deployment required manual reconciliation of millions of accounts, which left at least 600,000 people without access to their money for 28 days.
This fellow @chrismanfrank believes he’s changing the educational panorama, and yet acts like a petulant 5yr old himself. On a conversation about… kids! 😂
We were mutual followers; judge for yourself:
Twitter shows who people really are sometimes
Is this with whom you would want to trust your kids? @synthesischool 😬
I'm not a fan of FIRE, mainly because of its distinct bimodal approach towards life: the deferring phase, and then the living phase.
First of all, I believe that the discovery of our true preferences is a life-long exercise, and the most reliable way to reveal our preferences is to live them.
Everyone I know who retired after a grueling career went into retirement unprepared, and their life went downhill fast. The "Always Be Compounding" attitude during the deferring phase gets in the way of exercising the muscle that leads to discovering what we truly like & dislike.
Mineral wool turned out to be a lot more annoying to work with than fiberglass, but it is supposedly better for sound absorption and that’s my main concern.
Why you probably should discount your prices for Black Friday:
Last year, my digital products sold over $28,000 during the Black Friday period.
This month, I'm already over $30,000, and the peak is yet to come.
Here's everything I learned about Black Friday and discounts in general:
When selling digital products with no real marginal costs, pricing is almost all about human psychology. You can charge what you think people are willing to pay for.