thoughts

Dialling Down and Habits

In the last month I’ve noticed a few people I follow on the internet choosing to dial back their information intake. Most notably CGP Grey wrote an article called Dialling Down in which he described the creeping sense of overwhelm he was feeling in his life despite doing less ‘work’ than before.

I’m not sure why Grey’s article particularly spoke to me, but I suspect that it’s because I’m feeling similar to him despite a massive decrease in the ‘work’ I’m doing in the last few months. On reading his post, I found myself nodding to his description of the creeping Internet:

For lack of a better term, I’ll call it 'The Internet' but it's a broader than that: it’s the rise of all the digital vectors of information delivery pointed at me.

Daily Habits Make up life

Whether we notice it or not, every day all of us are building our lives by the habits we keep. They can be good habits like drinking water or exercising; or bad habits like smoking. That said, I don’t think it’s necessarily useful to think about habits as good or bad, they’re just habits. It’s what they add up to after weeks, months, or years of repetition that makes them good or bad. It’s whether they allow us to progress towards our goals.

I paused and listened and found another kind of background noise in my brain that had been increasing, ever so slowly, since I became self-employed a few years ago.

I think that the background noise Grey describes is the representation of habits he formed. I think this because I have formed very similar habits. I found myself spending my days listening to podcasts and not doing much else. I stopped being able to find time to write on my blog, think, read, and create. Through the power of the habit I had formed that was ‘listen to podcasts in every bit of downtime I have’ I had vanquished boredom in my life. At the same time, my mind slowly lost the capacity to create in the way that it had before.

Forming Habits

Forming habits is both hard work and incredibly easy. We can form a new habit through simple neglect. For example, after a week of coming home from work very tired and watching television, one might seed the beginnings of a ‘watch TV straight after work’ habit. However, when one wants to form a new habit often there are a few things in the way:

  1. Old habit
    • sleeping in vs exercise in the mornings. When faced with the choice to get up or not each morning, the old habit of staying in bed is really hard to break.
  2. Building momentum in the new habit
    • habits need to gain momentum to stick. It depends on what it is, but generally it takes around a month to build momentum.
  3. Seemingly unrelated habits
    • trying to do more exercise? Finding that you just don’t have enough energy to do it? It could be that while you are changing from the habit of being inactive to being active, your eating habits aren’t giving you the energy you need.
  4. No clarity around your reason to develop a new habit
    • This is a huge one. If you aren’t clear on why you’re trying to do this, you won’t be able to stick to it.

So often when we are trying to develop new habits, we’re doing it because it seems like it might be a good idea or that we see that it’s working for someone else. The fact is, if you aren’t really clear on why you’re doing it, and what you hope to gain from it, when things get difficult you won’t be able to stick to your new habit. Most of the time people do things because they want to feel something. For example, you want to feel good when you look in the mirror. If you can focus on how you want to feel and develop your habits to get you to that feeling, you should be able to stick to it.

Dialling Down

That brings me back to Grey and dialling down. I’ve made a conscious choice in the last week to try to change the ‘distract myself all the time with podcasts/internet’ habit I had formed. I’m not going as full on as Grey - I still subscribe to all the same podcasts, and I will still read my RSS feeds. I’m just making some changes to the routine that I found myself in that will allow far less time for those things. The new routine will also put the time for those things at times where they won’t creep into my day and distract me from what I really want to be doing that day. I’ve tried to list how I’m dealing with the forces that will try to stop me from building this new habit.

  1. The old habit: I believe the old habit in this case isn’t so much the podcasts or RSS itself, but the unstructured way in which I allowed those things into my life. Therefore the old habit is ‘a lack of structure’ whilst the new habit is structure.
  2. Building Momentum: Since it’s December and things tend to get very hectic in this month with family commitments, I think this will be the most difficult problem I face. It’s not what we do on sunny days that defines us, but what we do when things are hard.
  3. Seemingly unrelated habits: I think that a lack of structure in other parts of my day has contributed to these issues. I’m trying to ensure that I understand what I’m doing in other parts of my day, and being more aware of when I lose focus. That way when I fall of the wagon I have also built a habit to be able to catch myself and get back to work/creating.
  4. No clarity on the reason for the new habit: I want to build this new habit to give myself more time for meaningful creative work. I want to do more meaningful creative work because I want to feel accomplished and proud in my days and weeks for things that I have created.

Wish me luck in my new habits!

Bike Crash

After my awesome first day off yesterday, today I managed to injure myself. I fell off my bike after some enthusiastic braking and bloodied both my knees.

I was riding my bike into town to meet a friend for coffee[1]. As I made my way along the street I saw a couple of pedestrians who looked as though they were probably going to cross the road.


An Interlude About Being a Cyclist

I try to be an aware cyclist[2], constantly watching for things that might turn into a hazard. If I pay close attention to what is going on around me I can preempt potentially dangerous situations and react by slowing down, ringing my bell, or what ever is right for that moment.

The reason the pedestrians in this particular story caught my attention in the first place is that I’ve come across some problems with this exact situation before. If you’ll allow me explain my observations:

When a pedestrian is about to cross the road, they often step out onto the road without so much as a glance until they’re already on the road. I’ve thought about it a lot, and I think it’s because they’re expecting to be able to hear anything that is coming (i.e. a car). They’re absentmindedly relying on their ears to alert them to something on the road. Unfortunately, a push bike is all but silent on the road, so the pedestrian either has to see it or hear the bell of a diligent cyclist. If the cyclist isn’t paying attention, all of a sudden there is a pedestrian in the middle of the road even though the cyclist has right of way. As you know, you don’t want to get in the way of a cyclist with right of way!

As I hope you’ve picked up, I’m not getting on my high horse about this. As a pedestrian, I do it too. In fact, I was only able to figure out that this was what happening after I did it to some poor unsuspecting cyclist. People are just walking around minding their own business and don’t realise they’re doing it.

The fact is, we all share the roads and it’s everyone’s responsibility to pay attention even if you have right of way.


Back to the Story

Because I’m in the know about this ‘invasion of my right of way’[3] happens, I was wary of these pedestrians and expected them to step out wantonly onto the road at any moment. Much to my surprise, they looked directly at me well before stepping out onto the road. So, assuming that looking at me meant that they’d seen me and processed the information accordingly, I thought the hazard had passed and shifted my mind elsewhere.

Unfortunately for me, assumptions are dangerous. All of sudden they stepped out onto the road and caught me unprepared. I think they saw me but didn’t realise how fast I was going and figured they would be able to get across the road safely. In any case, because they took me by surprise I slammed the brakes on, lost control of the bike, and hit the road hard knees first[4]. It was an overreaction made worse by the fact that I was holding something in one hand[5] so probably hit my front brakes much harder than the back.

As I picked myself up off the road, the two pedestrians came rushing over to help me. They apologised profusely. In my shocked state I told them I was okay and that they’d caught me by surprise. I admitted to them that it was my overreaction to the situation that had caused the accident. They offered to help me, but sensing that the injuries weren’t that bad I simply sat in the gutter and caught my breath.

To these two unsuspecting pedestrians the whole thing must have been comical. They’re just walking along minding their own business when suddenly a cyclist yells out, slams on the brakes and ungracefully hits the road about 10 metres away for no apparent reason. I’m sure I caught them by surprise too. Hopefully they got a laugh out of it afterwards, I know I did.


As it turns out, I was wrong about the injuries. One knee in particular is pretty bad and needs ice, elevation, and rest. So I’m using the down time to do a guilt free catch up session on my Swift development videos. Oh, and even though the fall drew blood, I somehow managed to avoid putting a hole in my favourite pants.

There’s always an upside!


  1. the coffee was lovely by the way. You really should go to The Cupping Room.  ↩

  2. And road user in general. I do the same sorts of assessments on the fly as I drive in a car.  ↩

  3. Otherwise known as “Attack of the Silent Cyclists”. It’s a perspective thing.  ↩

  4. Because as any great stacker will tell you - “always fall with your knees first”.  ↩

  5. This is Canberra - I had to take a jumper with me! The stupid thing is, as I first started this ride I thought to myself “it could be dangerous to ride with something in my hands” but shrugged it off. As it turned out, to my peril!  ↩

Starting Things

Here’s a list of some things I did today:

  • Went for a run with a friend. I never go for runs.
  • Cleaned the mould off the bedroom wall that has been growing there as a result of Ash and I rarely being able to open up the house during the winter.
  • Spent a few hours this morning hanging out with Ash
  • Had lunch with a friend at Chez Frederick in Braddon
  • Did some Muay Thai training
  • Spent 20 minutes on the phone with someone who is helping me find a new job after recently leaving my job.
  • Read through some documentation on some programming language stuff I’m learning
  • Cooked my breakfast beans for the week
  • Cleared my old job out of my task management system
  • Watched The Terminator.
  • Worked out, just barely including some hand stand push ups (I’ve been aiming for that for a while now)
  • I sent my resume to another recruitment agent.

Today was a day full of first steps. I started some Muay Thai training that might never go anywhere. But who knows, maybe I’ll love it and end up deeply involved in Muay Thai in the next few months. I finally did my first wobbly hand stand push up after a month or so of practice. I sent out my resume to another recruitment agent. I started up a relationship with someone who can help coach me through the process of looking for a new job.


I’m writing this because in the last few weeks I’ve noticed that my appetite for starting new things has increased. I’ve become increasingly aware of the fact that despite being terrible when first starting something, one generally gets exponentially better at it just by continuing to show up for a few weeks. In particular I’ve noticed that with physical training. The main thing I’ve gleaned from this observation is that I’m never going to get good at anything unless I start by being terrible at it. I’m starting to lose my fear of being bad at things.

Since today was my first work day after being made redundant at my old job; I made a particular effort to notice the things that were either ‘firsts’ for me[1], or things some way down the path[2]. Having reached the end of the day and looked at my list, I feel as though I accomplished a whole lot today. It’s a little weird, because there’s nothing that I finished today. Not one thing. But that’s the whole point of this - I’m making a little progress every single day, even if it’s just the tiny first step.


  1. like the spontaneous Muay Thai training.  ↩

  2. the hand stand push ups I’ve been working on for at least a month.  ↩

Mistake One

Marco has a post up about his purchase of the new Macbook - as explained in the post he's dubbing it the Macbook One.

Because of the Xbox One being the third Xbox and this being the third major product line named “MacBook”, and because it famously only has one port for all data and power.

He isn't happy with it.

I just hate using it.

I hate typing on it, I hate the trackpad, it’s slower than I expected, the screen is noticeably blurry from non-native scaling to get reasonable screen space, and I don’t even find it very comfortable to use in my lap because it’s too small.

It got me thinking about my impulse purchase. Luckily, not all impulse purchases go wrong.


The last Apple product I impulse bought was the original iPad Air. I went to look at it and immediately bought it. I still maintain that it's the iPad that they were trying to make all along. Apart from my iPhone, the iPad Air has ended up being the Apple device I use the most. Recently I was able to travel interstate for a work meeting with nothing but my iPad Air with great success.

In the latest episode of Mac Power Users, Merlin Mann talks about his iPad Air 2 in much the same way that I talk about my original iPad Air. It has become the computer he wants to use because it is actively better at certain things than other computers.

It's a shame that Marco's purchase of the Macbook One was a mistake for him. I'm lucky that the iPad Air worked out great for me.

Thoughts on Facebook

I haven't been a Facebook user for about six months and I'm one of the only people I know who keeps a website. This week, as Facebook is releasing Instant Articles I'm finding myself compelled to spend more time writing on this website rather than going back to Facebook.

In the introduction post for Instant Articles, Michael Reckhow reports:

Mark Thompson, President and CEO, The New York Times Company said, “The New York Times already has a significant and growing audience on Facebook. We’re participating in Instant Articles to explore ways of growing the number of Times users on Facebook, improving their experience of our journalism and deepening their engagement. We have a long tradition of meeting readers where they are and that means being available not just on our own sites, but on the social platforms frequented by many current and potential Times users.”

The fact is, Mark Thompson is right. The readers are on Facebook. If they're not going to the New York Times, then they definitely aren't coming to my website.

Back in March when Instant Articles was first announced John Gruber quipped:

I can see why these news sites are tempted by the offer, but I think they’re going to regret it. It’s like Lando’s deal with Vader in The Empire Strikes Back.

In his Facebook Reckoning post, Ben Thompson notes that Gruber's criticism is probably valid, but the publishers have no choice. They have to be on Facebook.

The problem with Gruber’s criticism is that Lando never really actually had a choice. Vader was far more powerful than he was; taking a chance on a deal was the best of a bunch of bad options. That, I think, is the case with most publishers when it comes to Facebook.

I hope all of this doesn't apply to me. I'm not a publisher am I?! I still feel a great compulsion to host my own stuff on my own website. Ben Thompson's Smiling Curve is keeping me sane.

Mugs

mugs.jpg

I’m thinking about mugs today.

One of the cupboards in our house is filled with mugs. I use 1 mug per day (on average). Usually, since I’m looking for consistency for my cup of coffee, I use the same one. That means I often wash up that mug rather than having to use a different one from the cupboard. Because of the way our coffee machine works, on a weekend I use cups instead of mugs. Again, I tend to use the same two cups because I’m looking for consistency. It seems fairly silly to be constantly using the same 3–4 mugs/cups when I have at least 30 in the cupboard.

However, I’m not going to write about all those other mugs being a ‘waste of space’. I’m more interested in the reasons why I made the decision to have all those mugs. I think that my collection of mugs I don’t use is mainly because I didn’t make a decision about how I wanted to use the mugs.

I had the mugs in a box. I wanted the box to be empty quickly. So I put them in the cupboard.

Because I wasn’t limited for space, I didn’t have to make that decision. I didn’t have to think about what I wanted to use the mugs for - I was just trying to unpack boxes. And because I didn’t, that entire cupboard is now devoted to mugs. Interestingly[1], now that we have so many mugs, it means that sometimes my housemates and I end up using up way too many mugs before we wash them up. It has bred the attitude that we’ve got so many mugs, one may as well just get a new mug instead of re-using or washing up this one. It’s not really a problem, it’s just interesting to me because that lack of decision about what we wanted to use the mugs for has led to a relatively significant behaviour change completely unintentionally.

Mugs seem like a ridiculous thing to get me started thinking about this, but I’m reminded how often we don’t make decisions about things, and how much that lack of decision can be just as powerful as having made a decision. How often does something major happen in our lives because we didn’t make a distinct decision about how something should be done? It’s not that people are making stupid or bad decisions, it’s that people are making decisions about something else entirely[2].

Does any of this matter? Probably not. The house is plenty big enough to handle a few extra mugs. This is just a thought exercise about how a few mugs you don’t use can turn into an entire cupboard you barely use.


  1. Depending on your point of view. The rabbit hole can go pretty deep on this stuff.  ↩

  2. i.e. how can I most quickly get this box of mugs empty? Oh, I’ll just put them all in this cupboard. In this case, I wasn’t even considering how I wanted to use the mugs.  ↩