Interesting article by Cory. This is something I've been thinking about as
well: the need to engineer some some *slack* into everyting you do, as
over-optimising (which is usually optimising the wrong variable, or
possibly prematurely optimising the right one) can have various adverse
effects in various domains:

- Financial: e.g not leaving any cash in the bank account as it is all in
various investments can be bothersome when you have sudden need. Today is a
particularly interesting date to be talking about such a situation, for
folks in India at least. :)

- "Productivity" e.g filling your day with busy work or even "important"
work back to back.

- "Leisure" e.g feeling the need to fill every minute of your weekend or
holiday

- Childraising e.g "classes" tuitions, camps &c &c

All of which is another way of restating one of my favourite phrases: What
are you optimising for?

Thoughts?

Udhay

http://locusmag.com/2017/11/cory-doctorow-how-to-do-everything-lifehacking-considered-harmful/

Cory Doctorow: How to Do Everything (Lifehacking Considered Harmful)
 November 6, 2017

I was there when “lifehacking” was born. It was the 11th of February, 2004,
at the O’Reilly Emerging Technology Conference, held in a giant conference
hotel in San Diego. I was on the committee for ETech (as we called it) and
I had lobbied hard for the inclusion of a talk called “Life Hacks: Tech
Secrets of Overprolific Alpha Geeks” by Danny O’Brien, a technology
columnist and former standup comedian who is also a good friend (I am now
godfather to his daughter, Ada). I’d watched Danny compiling his research
for the talk and I knew it would be a great one.

I liveblogged his presentation, because this was before lifehacking, but
after liveblogging (if only barely). Danny described a research project in
which he interviewed “overprolific” tech workers who had a reputation for
doing a lot of things at once, and reported on their commonalities. My
notes on the talk are still live at <www.craphound.com/lifehacksetcon04.txt>,
but the long and short of them was that all of these super-nerds were
re­ally good at one or two flexible tools (ranging from Excel spreadsheets
to the programming language Python), and they used those tools to automate
many of the processes in their life. They also all used some kind of
master, monster to-do list and file-of-useful-pasted-snippets.

I recognized some of my own working habits in the description, and, more
importantly, acquired some useful tips. After all, I was one of those
really techie people who did a lot of different things at the same time:
writing novels, working for an activist group, editing a blog, sometimes
even having a life. One intriguing takeaway from the talk was a
recommendation to read David Allen’s 2001 book Getting Things Done, an
instant classic in the “personal productivity” genre (this was after the
productivity genre, but still before lifehacking).

Allen’s book is a fantastic and inspiring read. The core of his philosophy
is to recognize that there are more things in the world that you want to do
than you could do, and that, in the absence of a deliberate approach to
this conundrum, you are likely to default to doing things that are easy to
scratch off your to-do list, which are also the most trivial. After a
lifetime of this, you’ll have accomplished a lot of very little.

Allen counsels deliberate, mindful prioritization of this list, jettisoning
things on the basis that they are less satisfying or important than the
other things you’d like to do – even if those other things are harder, more
time consuming and less likely to result in a satisfying chance to scratch
an item off the list.

This resonated with me and, by 2004, I’d bought and given away half a dozen
copies of Getting Things Done and put its method in place. I even had a
chance to sit down with Allen in 2007 and talk about how the web fit into
his method.

It’s been more than a decade since I took up Allen’s method and started
lifehacking (as the kids say), and I have a report from the field.

The past 14 years have regularly featured junctures where I had to get rid
of something I liked doing so I could do something I liked doing more. Some
of that was low-hanging fruit (I haven’t watched TV regularly in more than
a decade), but after getting rid of the empty calories in my activity diet,
I had to start making hard choices.

In retrospect, I observe that the biggest predictor of whether an activity
surviving winnowing is whether it paid off in two or more of the aspects of
my life and career. If something made me a better blogger – but not a
bet­ter novelist and activist – it went. The more parts of my life were
implicated in an activity, the more likely I was to keep the activity in my
daily round.

Some of these choices were tough. I have all but given up on re-reading
books, despite the undeniable pleasure and value to understanding the
authors’ craft, which is easier to unpick on subsequent readings. But I
have more than 20 linear feet of books I’ve promised to read for blurbs and
reviews, and reading those books also teaches me something about the craft,
also brings me pleasure, also makes me a better reviewer, and also makes me
a better citizen of science fiction, who contributes to the success of
worthy new books.

Some social media tools – like Facebook – make for fun (if problematic)
socializing, and all social media pays some dividend to authors who are
hoping to sell books and activists who are hoping to win support, but
Twitter also teaches me to be a better writer by making me think about
brevity and sentence structure in very rigorous ways (and from an activist
perspective, Twitter is a better choice because it, unlike Facebook,
doesn’t want the web to die and be replaced by its walled garden) – so
Twitter is in, and Facebook is out.

There are some unexpected outcomes from this process, albeit ones that are
obvious in hindsight.

The first is that it has gotten progressively harder to tease apart the
different kinds of work I do. People often ask, “How much of your day do
you spend writing, and how much being an activist, and how much on
journalism?” The answer has always been that it’s hard to cleanly separate
these activities, because they overlap – writing a blog post is a way to
think through and track an idea that might show up in a story, and also a
way to raise alarm at a political affair.

But today, thanks to a vicious Darwinian winnowing process, the only
activities left in my day serve double- and triple-duty. There is virtually
no moment in my working day that can cleanly be billed to only one ledger.

The corollary of this is that it gets much, much harder to winnow out
activities over time. Anything I remove from the Jenga stack of my day
disturbs the whole tower.

And that means that undertaking new things, speculative things that have no
proven value to any of the domains where I work (let alone all of them) has
gotten progressively harder, even as I’ve grown more productive.
Optimization is a form of calcification.

That presents a paradox: if the purpose of lifehacking is to mindfully
choose your priorities, what can you do when that process leads you to a
position where no more choices are possible?

I’ll let you know if I figure it out. In the meantime, let this be a
warning to anyone who wants to do it all.

Cory Doctorow is the author of Walkaway, Little Brother, and Information
Doesn’t Want to Be Free (among many others); he is the co-owner of Boing
Boing, a special consultant to the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
visiting professor of Computer Science at the Open University and an MIT
Media Lab Research Affiliate.

This review and more like it in the November 2017 issue of Locus.


-- 

((Udhay Shankar N)) ((udhay @ pobox.com)) ((www.digeratus.com))

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