I recently discovered a simple (but not easy) step-by-step process that tripled by personal productivity and made me happier along the way.

It costs $0 and no, it's not some note-taking or to-do list system.

(thread)
In short:

• Step 1: develop meta-awareness of your state of mind.
• Step 2: pattern-match to identify your mind's most common modes.
• Step 3: learn to pick activities that match each mode.

I know that sounds kind of weird but I promise it'll make sense in a minute.
== Step 1 ==

You need to learn to observe what's going on in your mind almost like a third-person observer.

This is difficult and requires a lot of practice.

The goal is to have moments of clarity where you're able to see "ah that's what's going on in my mind right now".
== Step 2 ==

If you're able to have these moments of clarity regularly, you'll be able to spot patterns and categorize them.
For example, one typical pattern is that my mind starts looking for distractions.

Another is that my mind is hyper-analytical and is looking at everything from ten different angles.

Sometimes it's in monkey mode and jumping like crazy from one idea to the next.
Another mode that is typical for me is what I like to call robot mode.

Basically, I'm catching myself going through the motions but not really accomplishing anything meaningful.

And there's low-filter mode which typically occurs when I'm a bit tired.
== Step 3 ==

Now the key is to embrace these different states of mind instead of fighting against them.

For example, when your mind is seeking distractions, a typical reaction is to get angry and to try to power through nevertheless.

This is stupid and a recipe for burnout.
In distraction mode, my mind is looking for new inputs. It usually occurs when I'm not 100% convinced that what I'm doing is what I really should be doing.

My way of embracing it is to always have a (virtual) box of healthy intellectual "snacks" ready.
This is important because otherwise, it's easy to just doomscroll for hours and consume intellectual junk.

With a list of high-quality essays, books, and videos always at hand, I can steer my desire for new inputs in healthy directions.
When my mind enters robot mode it clearly needs a break. In a sense, it has already shut down but my fingers are still moving across the keyboard.

The proper way to embrace it is to close the laptop and do something else. Meet friends, go outside for a walk or to the gym.
I've also learned to love low-filter mode.

It's really great for any kind of writing. I'm writing all my tweets, essays, and emails when my mind has entered this state.

In low-filter mode, these tasks are effortless while they're hard work in any other mode.
In contrast, tasks that require more brainpower like programming or any kind of math are better done when my mind is hyper-analytical.
Trying to force yourself to do a task that is not a good fit for your current state of mind is not only a poor use of time but actually counter-productive.
Back when I was still doing physics, I used to force myself to continue calculations even though I was tired.

Progress was slow and it was a frustrating experience.

I also made so many mistakes that the next day I often spent hours finding and fixing them.
(It of course would've been smarter and faster just to delete the nonsense I produced when I was tired. But the usual sunk cost fallacy prevented me from doing this.)
Had I stopped working after 4 hours when my mind started to get tired, I definitely would've been more productive.

I could've used the remaining hours of the day to properly recharge and wouldn't have to waste hours looking for errors the next day.
Similarly, when I started my Bootstrap MBA experiment, I forced myself to write tweets first thing in the morning.

But early in the day, my mind is hyper-analytical. It's trying to analyze every word I write from ten different angles. Hence every tweet felt like hard work.
Now I write tweets in the evening when my filters are low.

It's fun, feels like play, and I have zero doubts that my tweets are better as a result.
I also used to get angry when I didn't get 8-hours of sleep at night.

Now I'm thinking: "Oh great, it's another writing day!".
Or when my mind enters monkey mode, I embrace it by cleaning and organizing things.

I use Telegram to take quick notes during the day by sending messages to myself. Monkey mode is perfect to go through these notes and sort them into Notion.
Obviously, your mind probably works differently and might have different modes.

So forget the details. The most important takeaway is that learning to observe your mind, to categorize the different states it can be in, and then embracing them is an incredible superpower.
If you liked this thread, make sure to hop back to the top of the thread and retweet the first tweet to bookmark it and share it with others.

This will help me understand if the thread provided value and motivate me to write similar ones in the future.

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More from @jakobgreenfeld

12 Jan
Everyone has just 24 hours a day but some people clearly manage to get outsized returns.

They're not just playing, they're winning.

And I want to learn how they do that.

To start with, I spent 10+ hours studying how Trung Phan wins at Twitter.

(thread)
Why start with @TrungTPhan?

I want to learn how to win and to quote @ShaanVP: "Winning is Trung."

This always stuck with me and the data backs this up. Image
What fascinates me about Trung is that he didn't simply get lucky.

He studied the Twitter algorithm carefully, then developed a strategy and executed it relentlessly.

So even though there can only be one Trung, there's a lot to learn.
Read 20 tweets
7 Jan
I discovered an incredible niche hidden in plain sight.

Clever entrepreneurs are already exploiting it and rake in $30k+/month with very simple products.

The good news is there's still plenty of room.

In this thread I reveal all my findings and an actionable plan:
== Signal 1 ==

A 19-year-old girl made $400k+ selling baby names.

What?

Her name is Beau Jessup and she runs Special Name.

It's a simple website designed to provide Chinese parents with culturally appropriate English names for their babies.
Incredibly, this is what the site looks like.
Read 19 tweets
26 Dec 21
Really fun idea.

Feed a list of projects you launched so far into GPT-3 and get a tailormade suggestion of what you could launch next.

Joseph did it so far for 18 makers and since he's also sharing the prompts it's very easy to do it for yourself.
A few more ideas GPT-3 has for me:

· Omniscient AI - A startup that predicts the future.
· A monthly newsletter with the latest crypto news and projects.
· An investment intelligence platform for investors.
Alternative Data

Data and signals that the rest of the market is missing. Our newsletter and podcast covers topics such as: predictive analytics, NLP, chatbot analytics, retail, cryptocurrency, ecommerce, and other opportunities.
Read 9 tweets
10 Dec 21
So turns out that Product Hunt shadow-banned my launch today.

They have a rule that "Lists / Directories" are not allowed but TIL this really just means products using Airtable are not allowed ¯\_(ツ)_/¯

More details below.
This is the response I initially got with a link to this post help.producthunt.com/en/articles/35…
But I then pointed out that there are still plenty of "Lists /Directories" that make it to the frontpage.

Even low-quality ones like this: producthunt.com/posts/the-ulti…

This is the response I got 👇
Read 11 tweets
10 Dec 21
🤔 Three days ago I saw a discussion here on Twitter about alternative ways to uncover websites for sale.

💡 The next morning I had the idea that I can automate the process and turn it into a little product.

🚀 Today I'm launching it.

producthunt.com/posts/abandone…
First of all, credit where credit is due.

This is the conversation that gave me the idea 👇

The idea is that just like in the physical world there are plenty of neglected properties online.

Many sites of course get listed on the usual marketplaces but at least just as many never end up there.
Read 6 tweets
7 Dec 21
I'm not sure what's going on over at Indie Hackers but this doesn't look good to me. Image
I got curious and looked at the data after reading this recent discussion.

indiehackers.com/post/i-watch-h…
Three possible explanations:

· Fewer people are indie hacking.
· Fewer people are building in public.
· Fewer people are using Indie Hackers to build in public.
Read 5 tweets

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