šŸ“š node [[mind management not time management]]
  • Author:: [[David Kadavy]]
  • Full Title:: Mind Management, Not Time Management
  • Category:: [[books]]
  • Highlights first synced by [[Readwise]] [[November 1st, 2020]]

    • Taylor noticed that if he tried to fill all of his workersā€™ time with efficient movement, he didnā€™t get what he expected. If he wanted to get a full day out of a worker who was moving chunks of iron in the yard, Taylor needed not only to prescribe movement to that worker ā€“ Taylor also needed to prescribe rest to that worker. (LocationĀ 215)
    • Taylor had to leave some time empty to truly get optimal output from his workers. (LocationĀ 218)
    • ā€œthe point of diminishing returns.ā€ (LocationĀ 219)
    • the point of negative returns. (LocationĀ 223)
    • ā€œthink weeksā€ (LocationĀ 280)
    • ā€œthe first task of a writer is to create enough space and time for writing to emerge.ā€ (LocationĀ 284)
    • The first false assumption time management makes is that time management treats time as a commodity. (LocationĀ 296)
    • ā€œThings are not difficult to make; what is difficult is putting ourselves in the state of mind to make them.ā€ (LocationĀ 325)
    • The next time you set out to be productive, ask yourself, What work am I in the mood to do right now? Then, ask yourself, What do I need to do that fits that mood? (LocationĀ 353)
    • To get into flow, you need to go with the flow. (LocationĀ 358)
    • ask yourself, What mood would be most conducive to doing this work? Then, ask yourself, When was the last time I felt that way? Finally, see if you can replicate the conditions that put you in that mood. (LocationĀ 359)
    • If you want to kill creativity: Get five hours of sleep a night, fight traffic for two hours a day, and start each day with a piping hot thermos of a psychoactive drug. (LocationĀ 425)
    • Four hours creative work a day is about the limit. ā€”G. H. Hardy (LocationĀ 439)
    • Writing has become the ā€œbig rockā€ around which Iā€™m building everything else in my life. Iā€™ve cleared away all my possessions, and Iā€™ve cleared away as many responsibilities as I can. (LocationĀ 461)
    • Additionally, time is not fungible. If you went to the Golden Gate Bridge and made a one-inch slice straight through the halfway point of the bridge, you wouldnā€™t just lose an inch. Youā€™d also lose a bridge. (LocationĀ 589)
    • That two-thirty feeling is actually a crossover of two different biological systems: the circadian system, and the ā€œsleep debtā€ system. All day, the circadian system is climbing upward, making you more alert. (This alertness will drop sharply at bedtime.) Meanwhile, the sleep debt system is creeping downward, sapping your energy. (LocationĀ 599)
    • Intuitively, it seems that to do good work, we need to be alert. If weā€™re driving a forklift or performing surgery, this is true. But creative work is different. The more alert we are, the less prone we are to doing the divergent thinking necessary to have great insights. (LocationĀ 621)
    • This slight spaciness first thing in the morning is not a problem to be fixed ā€“ in fact, itā€™s a creative gift. Instead of trying to make it go away, you can harness it for your best ideas. (LocationĀ 645)
    • Iā€™m choosing to write first thing in the morning. No coffee, no breakfast, just straight to writing. (LocationĀ 646)
    • My desk is surrounded on three sides by white walls. I used to keep a messy desk, but thereā€™s something powerful about this new deskā€™s clean stark surface, surrounded by clean stark walls. This desk is so small, thereā€™s not even room for it to become cluttered. I know research shows that big, open spaces are good for creative thinking ā€“ not tiny desks in white-walled coves (more on that in Chapter 4). But somehow, it works. Iā€™m still groggy enough in my morning writing sessions that Iā€™m having good ideas, yet each time I look up to daydream, thereā€™s no window to stare out of. Thereā€™s just a blank white wall. (LocationĀ 659)
    • The First Hour Rule is simply this: Spend the first hour of your day working on your most important project, and your most important project, only. (LocationĀ 673)
    • If you start your day working on the most important thing, thereā€™s less of a chance for other things to get in the way. So donā€™t check email, donā€™t check social media ā€“ just get right to the most important thing. Make it a rule, and it will be easy. (LocationĀ 682)
      • Note: But what if the most important task isnt a creative one? Maybe keep distractions at bay for another hour after youve activated the prefrontal cortex?
    • The First Hour Rule helps you start off your day with a win. You feel better the rest of the day when youā€™ve already done your most important work. (LocationĀ 685)
    • As I started off this experiment, it was difficult for the first couple weeks to follow the First Hour Rule. (LocationĀ 689)
    • most peopleā€™s cognitive peak is in the late morning, a couple hours after waking up. So, you can use the First Hour Rule for a session of divergent thinking, and follow it up with some convergent thinking. (LocationĀ 701)
    • Each morning, I spend the first hour of my day drafting a blog post. I then spend the next half hour editing and publishing that blog post. This helps me follow up divergent thinking with convergent thinking. (LocationĀ 703)
    • I do occasionally find myself involuntarily sleep deprived due to jet lag or a massively-delayed flight. When this happens, I do try to take advantage of the opportunity. (LocationĀ 711)
    • ā€œWhen sleep deprived, the kind of creativity that would be most productive would be idea generation rather than the kind of detailed analytic work that requires sharpness and alertness.ā€ (LocationĀ 714)
    • clock-time, and event-time. Some cultures operate on clock-time. They do things according to what time it is. Lunch is at this time, this meeting is at this other time, another meeting is at this other time. Cultures that donā€™t work on clock-time tend to operate on event-time. Lunch is when youā€™re hungry. This meeting is after lunch. The meeting isnā€™t over until we meet our objective. If by then weā€™re not hungry for dinner, weā€™ll also have the other meeting. (LocationĀ 753)
    • The first stage is Preparation. During Preparation, youā€™re learning everything you can about the problem. (LocationĀ 951)
    • The second stage is Incubation. (LocationĀ 954)
    • Incubation happens any time you arenā€™t actively working on the problem. (LocationĀ 955)
    • The third stage is Illumination. Illumination is the ā€œahaā€ moment ā€“ the moment neuroscientists would call insight. (LocationĀ 956)
    • Verification is when you evaluate the idea you arrived at during the Illumination stage. (LocationĀ 960)
    • Preparation, Incubation, Illumination, and Verification. (LocationĀ 963)
    • Furthermore, I knew that the things I wrote the next morning wouldnā€™t be ready for print. There would be awkward sentence structures, unnecessary explanations, or things Iā€™d need to look up one last time. (LocationĀ 969)
    • Donā€™t push too hard on creative blocks. Instead, soften them through Preparation. Why? The answer lies in the limitations of the human mind. When we come up with a creative idea, we connect seemingly unrelated concepts. But to find connections that work, we need to try many different combinations. When we try to power through a difficult problem all at once, we limit the number of combinations we can try. We donā€™t find a solution, we get frustrated, and we burn out. (LocationĀ 1005)
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