back to indexEp. 208: The Task Freeze Effect
Chapters
0:0 Cal's intro
2:10 To do lists are inhumane
14:33 Cal talks about Blinkist and Eightsleep
18:13 Is distracted deep work the same as shallow work?
22:58 How does Cal do quarterly reviews?
25:0 What should I include in my quarterly plan?
27:35 How do I save my failing productivity system?
36:19 Can I sell a book without social media?
47:57 The five books Cal read in July 2022
67:32 Cal talks about ExpressVPN and Policy Genius
71:12 How do I manage the anxiety of not achieving a goal?
75:1 How do I handle having too many ideas?
00:00:00.000 |
So here's the phenomenon that I think is common. 00:00:02.200 |
You have a big, let's call it task lists, right? 00:00:07.040 |
You, you go through your calendars, your inbox, you have all these various things 00:00:13.020 |
And you're looking at this list of all this wide variety of 00:00:19.400 |
I'm Cal Newport, and this is Deep Questions, episode 208. 00:00:26.180 |
I'm here in my Deep Work HQ joined once again by Jesse. 00:00:35.780 |
I've done some episodes with a blanket over my head up in Vermont. 00:00:40.340 |
So it's nice to have the old gang, the old format, everything back together. 00:00:46.440 |
I got a, an episode plan that has all the, all the things we like. 00:00:58.380 |
We're, we're going back to all of the hits because it was a, it was an interesting 00:01:02.600 |
July, a lot of vacations, vacations are over. 00:01:11.520 |
So you'll see, you'll see, you'll see when we get there. 00:01:14.080 |
I'll tell you, here's something that was interesting. 00:01:15.760 |
Speaking of us being apart, uh, the other day I did NPR from the HQ. 00:01:21.540 |
And I use your microphone because for whatever mysterious audio 00:01:26.020 |
Gremlin reasons, your microphone generates less buzz or hiss or whatever it is. 00:01:33.940 |
It threw me your seats in a little different position. 00:01:36.880 |
The camera has a different eyeline than mine. 00:01:39.740 |
I mean, it's, it felt like when you switch from right to left handed and 00:01:42.780 |
hitting a baseball or something, I got to say, it's like going to England 00:01:46.820 |
I was driving on the other side of the road, except for doing an NPR interview, 00:01:50.860 |
but it definitely, I was like, this is not right. 00:01:52.300 |
I don't, I don't, I don't feel right over here. 00:01:58.020 |
It's it's man threw me off, but persevered, persevered nonetheless. 00:02:08.300 |
Well, let's start, get back to basics a little bit, do a habit tune up. 00:02:13.500 |
So when this is where I go and I take a particular strategy or tactic 00:02:19.140 |
relevant to living a deeper, more productive life, and we, we get into the weeds. 00:02:22.980 |
This one is based off of my recent experience of coming back from a long 00:02:28.820 |
vacation and that dreaded first weekday back after vacation, where you, you, 00:02:37.500 |
You go through your inboxes, you confront your calendar again, you go to your 00:02:42.140 |
long neglected quarterly plans and you realize, okay, I'm completely overwhelmed. 00:02:45.860 |
How am I ever going to get my arms around this? 00:02:47.460 |
It's never my favorite thing, but I went through it. 00:02:49.260 |
But as I was going through this, the, the Monday after I got back from my vacation, 00:02:53.140 |
it got me thinking about a bigger effect that I wanted to discuss. 00:02:57.380 |
So here's the phenomenon that I think is common. 00:02:59.500 |
You have a big, let's call it task lists, right? 00:03:04.380 |
You, you go through your calendars, your inbox, you have all these various things 00:03:10.340 |
And you're looking at this list of all this wide variety of different 00:03:17.740 |
It just seems impossible to even get started. 00:03:21.700 |
It's not that any one particular task is impossible to do or incredibly daunting. 00:03:26.820 |
It's just somehow seeing the combination of them seems to mentally speaking, 00:03:31.380 |
freeze you in place, and it's very difficult to make progress. 00:03:33.660 |
You go online and you have to check baseball trade rumors, and you go back 00:03:37.180 |
and check your inbox again, and you look at social media and you do anything you 00:03:41.260 |
Something about something about it freezes you. 00:03:47.060 |
So we're going to, for those who are watching this on YouTube, 00:03:49.620 |
youtube.com/calendarportmedia, I'm bringing up on the screen now a sample list. 00:03:56.660 |
So if you're looking, if you're looking at this on YouTube, on the left here, I 00:04:01.300 |
have a list of just the types of things you would drop onto a list as you're 00:04:06.420 |
So for those listing I have on here, transfer money, next step on dinner 00:04:10.900 |
party, new copy for Karen, budget, reply to Jennifer, reply to mom, add 00:04:14.420 |
reminder to calendar for bill laundry, notes to Alex, order new cable, update 00:04:20.900 |
A lot of these actually, by the way, came from my processing of 00:04:27.700 |
So when you face a task list like this, it's common to freeze. 00:04:38.420 |
Now what's actually going on here is there's a, there's a neuroscientific 00:04:45.900 |
If you get into the details of how the human brain actually plans and then 00:04:50.260 |
motivates you to do non-simple physical action, it gets pretty complicated, but 00:04:56.420 |
there's a whole, what we call, there's a, a, a sort of a plan execute reward loop. 00:05:02.060 |
Where if there's something you want to do, you set this target of 00:05:11.500 |
So it can look at memories and pull up memories of you executing this thing 00:05:15.380 |
in the past so that you can simulate different plans and find one that works. 00:05:19.140 |
Then there's a very complicated connection from here to the ventral 00:05:22.860 |
striatum, which is a sort of complicated, uniquely human part of the brain. 00:05:27.500 |
That's very involved in motivation for non-simple physical activity. 00:05:35.540 |
So it's not a simple physical activity, such as I need to reach over here to 00:05:39.260 |
grab this apple, but something more abstract and complicated, they all work 00:05:42.020 |
together, the motivation is generated and you start working. 00:05:45.020 |
When you see a list that's this long and this diverse. 00:05:48.100 |
So it's many different things and they, they are, uh, semantically unrelated. 00:05:53.500 |
What's involved in getting new copy to Karen is very different than what's 00:05:57.860 |
involved in working on your household budget, that apparatus can't function. 00:06:02.980 |
That apparatus is meant for, this is the thing you want to do. 00:06:11.820 |
It can't handle the idea of these 10 or 15 different things that all have to be 00:06:15.660 |
done because it can't literally have the bandwidth to try to make a plan, to 00:06:21.420 |
envision a plan, to pull out memories from your hippocampus and simulate 00:06:26.140 |
So that feeling of task freeze, that feeling of task freeze that we see when 00:06:31.380 |
we have a long and diverse list is actually the neuroscientific correlate 00:06:41.020 |
So it doesn't generate the needed motivation. 00:06:43.500 |
So this way of work and organization that's so common in modern life, where 00:06:48.380 |
we have a lot of very, very things that have to be done all mixed together all 00:06:52.300 |
at once really is incompatible with our brain. 00:06:56.580 |
I had a list like this longer, but actually a lot of these things are from that list. 00:07:02.020 |
Well, if you understand, if you understand what's happening in your brain, you can 00:07:05.940 |
work with that and what I do, what I did the other day, what I commonly do in 00:07:10.700 |
these situations is I will begin sorting these lists and combining like tasks, 00:07:19.340 |
tasks that are a similar type of behavior using a similar part of your brain. 00:07:24.700 |
And I will sort them into standalone groups or piles. 00:07:28.660 |
So if you look on the screen here, so again, if you're watching, if you're 00:07:31.220 |
watching on YouTube, uh, you'll see, I have one group where I have reply to 00:07:35.540 |
Jennifer reply to mom, next step dinner party. 00:07:38.380 |
And I've, I've elaborated that task to say, email restaurant, because that's 00:07:43.540 |
I have to email the person at the restaurant. 00:07:49.260 |
I'm in email, I'm composing messages to people. 00:07:54.980 |
Then I have a separate group below that, right? 00:07:57.260 |
Put add calendar, reminder, order new cable, update calendar. 00:08:01.460 |
Uh, I should say update Amazon bio and start laundry. 00:08:04.620 |
By the way, a lot of those are actually real Jesse. 00:08:07.580 |
So the new cable is I ordered an ethernet cable for the HQ because we were having 00:08:12.060 |
some connection issues with the NPR recording. 00:08:14.740 |
So I'm just going to hardwire this beast straight to the, straight to the modem. 00:08:18.980 |
My agent wrote me and was like, you realize your bio on Amazon, your author 00:08:23.380 |
bio was written right when so good, they can't ignore you came out in 2012. 00:08:29.380 |
So these are actually real things, but why are those four things together in 00:08:32.660 |
this group, because in my mind, those are all what I would think of as. 00:08:39.980 |
I could jump over to Amazon and order something. 00:08:42.140 |
I have to copy this bio for my website and log in. 00:08:45.180 |
So it's, it's online, minor semi-tedious, but requires very little thinking type 00:08:50.260 |
tasks, next group notes for Alex notes for Karen. 00:08:55.220 |
No, I put these together because these are things that are going to 00:09:03.260 |
The other day notes for Alex, Alex is my, my doctoral student and notes. 00:09:07.060 |
I owed him on his doctoral dissertation proposal. 00:09:09.660 |
Uh, Karen, Karen is actually the, the web designer and consultant that 00:09:16.820 |
We're doing a revamp of Cal Newport.com and actually I order some 00:09:26.060 |
I got to load up a non-trivial cognitive context. 00:09:31.260 |
And then finally I have budget transfer money, writing plan in its own group. 00:09:37.580 |
You're thinking about your finances, family finances. 00:09:41.420 |
I felt like that was a good mode where you would also maybe 00:09:45.020 |
So I have, I have grouped together like with like. 00:09:48.860 |
And the final piece of the strategy is that you tackle one group at a time. 00:09:55.860 |
When you're doing that group, that's what you're all in doing that group. 00:10:00.820 |
You go get the new coffee, you go for a walk. 00:10:03.540 |
Then you come back and tackle another group, take a break. 00:10:06.180 |
You know, I'm going to go chat over here, check in on whatever going 00:10:12.420 |
This ends up being a much more effective way of getting through this work, 00:10:17.580 |
because what you will immediately notice is that when you are focusing on here 00:10:21.340 |
is a group of similar tasks that I've grouped together and all I want to do 00:10:25.180 |
is tackle this group, your planning apparatus can deal with that. 00:10:32.660 |
We're going to go in here and send emails that we're going to get done. 00:10:40.420 |
A little bit of, oh, you got it done when you're done. 00:10:42.580 |
When you group like by like your brain can get in the game and you get rid of the 00:10:47.660 |
task freeze and you can actually make progress. 00:10:49.540 |
Now, why do you take a break between the groups? 00:10:51.180 |
Because you have to let that cognitive context begin to dissipate. 00:10:56.540 |
You're not stuck in the doing difficult notes to students and web consultant 00:11:00.940 |
context, let the context dissipate, let your brain catch a breather. 00:11:03.620 |
And load up that whole planning apparatus for the next group. 00:11:07.260 |
So I think the name for this habit tune up I was I was using my notes is task 00:11:15.900 |
And what I meant by that is just staring at a task list like the one I had up on 00:11:20.620 |
the screen on the left there where it's 15 different unrelated things. 00:11:25.220 |
Is literally in human in the sense that it does not match the way the human brain 00:11:30.460 |
And so we have to work with our actual cognitive apparatus grouping like by like 00:11:36.940 |
That's the way to tackle long diverse task lists. 00:11:42.580 |
And it got me through catching up when I got back from my trip. 00:11:46.260 |
So is that task list in your working memory dot TXT? 00:11:53.180 |
I want to just type as fast as I can into a text file. 00:11:55.620 |
Then it's then it's so easy in a text file to copy and paste and move things around 00:11:59.500 |
and just put a bunch of equal signs to put little dividers between them. 00:12:03.940 |
And then also when I'm tackling individual tasks and I have my working memory dot 00:12:08.420 |
TXT plain text file open, I always just have a buffer section where I can copy text 00:12:13.100 |
and write text and put notes to myself just to extend my working memory and help me 00:12:19.260 |
So, yeah, when I'm going through a list like this. 00:12:21.100 |
And organizing it, grouping it and executing it, the number one tool that ties that 00:12:27.060 |
all together is that plain text file, plain text tile on my desktop is organizing, 00:12:32.260 |
extending my brain, organizing all this work. 00:12:34.140 |
So all of this stuff I did in a text file on my desktop. 00:12:37.460 |
And then when you when you're on vacation, you have certain things that come up, you 00:12:47.180 |
Or I had a paper notebook, the bigger spiral bound notebook. 00:12:50.500 |
But yeah, you capture wherever and then you just when you need to deal with it, 00:12:54.460 |
transfer it all into the text file, go through your calendar to see what's coming up, 00:12:59.020 |
transfer the relevant things to your text file, go through your inboxes, transfer the 00:13:02.860 |
relevant things, your text file, just dump the whole thing. 00:13:06.500 |
This list is just completely freeze your mind. 00:13:10.660 |
Sort, get it into the groups and then you can actually you can actually start executing. 00:13:16.220 |
It's all brain hacking and it's almost miraculous how it works because it's it's a 00:13:21.740 |
It's why can't I do the first thing in this list? 00:13:27.780 |
It's because your brain is looking at the whole list and says, I can't handle that. 00:13:31.100 |
And if I can't handle it, I cannot get the proper. 00:13:33.900 |
Whatever elements of the cortex, the ventral striatum operating properly, that doesn't 00:13:45.020 |
It's chemicals, it's neurons, it's not some dualistic. 00:13:48.380 |
You have your soul that that is motivated independently of your of your hardware as a 00:13:54.140 |
So if you're getting back from vacation, I would suggest that. 00:13:58.060 |
I'll say, Jesse, my wife knows me well, she said, I'm clearing my schedule, I'm clearing 00:14:07.980 |
I don't want to have anything to do with you on Monday, the Monday after vacation, 00:14:11.940 |
because she knows how upset and cranky I get when I have to, I mean, these lists get 00:14:16.740 |
long for me when I'm away for two weeks, there's a lot of things that build up and 00:14:20.260 |
she's like, it always stresses you out and it always takes you longer than you think. 00:14:23.140 |
And so like, I'm taking the kids to the pool and I have no expectation of seeing you 00:14:29.580 |
Oh, well, let's talk about a couple sponsors. 00:14:39.980 |
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We also got to talk about our friends at eight, sleep. 00:16:15.340 |
People don't realize the degree to which temperature makes a difference in the 00:16:23.380 |
I believe right now, Jesse, what is it outside here in DC today? 00:16:35.140 |
Uh, this is what we have to deal with down here. 00:16:43.380 |
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with my eight sleep pod set the 55 degrees wrapped around me like a robe. 00:17:42.500 |
I don't know why I can't just always have a cool eight sleep pod with me. 00:17:49.180 |
The, uh, the pod is not magic, but it feels like it. 00:17:52.300 |
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The first one comes from the alchemist who asks if one is doing deep work and 00:18:21.740 |
gets distracted, does that transmogrify the work into shallow work? 00:18:31.260 |
Well, first of all, I appreciate the Calvin and Hobbes reference with, uh, 00:18:34.780 |
transmogrify from scientific progress goes Boink from that collection. 00:18:39.820 |
Calvin builds the transmogrifier, which can transform you 00:18:50.620 |
Let's do it quick, but I think it's important. 00:18:52.420 |
So in the ontology of knowledge, work focus, we have deep work 00:19:02.460 |
So it's where you're focused without distraction on cognitively 00:19:06.540 |
I often just casually define as everything else. 00:19:09.980 |
So the question is, if you don't meet all of the standards of deep work is 00:19:17.380 |
And actually, if we're going to be technical about this, not really. 00:19:25.860 |
So shallow work is efforts that do not directly move the needle. 00:19:32.100 |
So it's not the effort that is directly creating the value on 00:19:40.100 |
If you don't do shallow work, your company can't exist. 00:19:45.220 |
But on the other hand, if all you did was shallow work, your company would 00:19:51.060 |
So if you're the computer programmer, the actual effort that creates 00:20:01.420 |
They can sell shallow work, like going to the marketing meetings, et cetera. 00:20:08.540 |
But if all you did was that shallow work, no code got produced. 00:20:12.820 |
Deep work is a little bit more complicated because instead of just 00:20:20.420 |
So deep work, we have to care about the content. 00:20:23.140 |
So deep work needs to be focused on something that actually moves the needle. 00:20:29.980 |
It's the core activities that matter in your professional life. 00:20:32.340 |
But the how matters as well to really qualify as deep work. 00:20:36.380 |
It has to be executed without distraction, which means 00:20:41.060 |
No quick checking of your email, no quick checking of your phone. 00:20:48.260 |
You need the how and the what together for it to count as deep work. 00:20:50.980 |
So the way I see this question is what happens if you keep the what, 00:20:53.740 |
you're focusing on something important, you're writing computer code, 00:20:58.260 |
So instead of doing that without distraction, 00:21:02.580 |
Well, really what you end up with there is something that's not deep work 00:21:06.820 |
The activity that you're doing is cognitively demanding and important, 00:21:09.500 |
but the way you're doing it is not up to the full standard 00:21:16.180 |
I mean, it essentially throws you into a productivity purgatory. 00:21:20.260 |
Maybe we could call it pseudo deep work or failed deep work. 00:21:23.540 |
And it's not where you want to be, as long as you're working on an activity 00:21:27.700 |
that's really important, you want to do it in the way 00:21:29.860 |
that's going to get the most value out of the time you spend, 00:21:35.700 |
So we really should have three things here, shallow work, 00:21:41.140 |
Shallow work is necessary, but not sufficient to be very successful. 00:21:45.260 |
It's important logistical things, but it's not the stuff that moves the needle. 00:21:48.460 |
Deep work is it all coming together and you're working on what matters 00:21:51.860 |
and you're doing it in a way that allows you to do it at a high level 00:21:55.820 |
You're working on something important, but not doing it that well. 00:22:00.940 |
So your ability to focus is reduced in the quality of what you produce 00:22:08.260 |
So let's go with we'll go with pseudo deep work for now. 00:22:16.460 |
Complexity that's entered my discussions of deep work is it's the how and the what. 00:22:23.620 |
Right. And you got to get you got to get both of those things for it to really, 00:22:28.540 |
So in a way, pseudo might be a little bit too. 00:22:30.980 |
Positive of an adjective for it, because it's kind of distracted work, right? 00:22:42.340 |
Like, yeah, something like that, degraded deep work. 00:22:47.180 |
Yeah. Why? But I mean, as long as you're spending the time 00:22:49.460 |
like to work on something important, you probably want to get 00:22:57.020 |
All right. So I have two questions here that are on basically the same thing. 00:23:00.940 |
So I'll I'll read an answer one and immediately do the other. 00:23:07.780 |
Linda says, how do you structure quarterly reviews? 00:23:12.940 |
Do you summarize metrics from the whole quarter? 00:23:15.140 |
Do you stick to going over weekly reviews or is there an introspective 00:23:21.460 |
All right. So again, in my multiscale planning approach to time management, 00:23:27.780 |
Those are informed by your weekly plans, which you do every week. 00:23:30.540 |
Your weekly plans are informed by your quarterly plans, 00:23:38.140 |
What should your review of the quarter that just passed look like? 00:23:47.020 |
So in my own practice, when I get to the end of a quarter. 00:23:50.300 |
I do not have some sort of formal or systematic way 00:23:54.300 |
of reviewing what happened during that quarter. 00:24:00.740 |
So that quarterly plan that I use to drive that quarter, 00:24:04.620 |
I'm revisiting that every week when I build my weekly plan. 00:24:07.300 |
And as the quarter unwinds, as that unfolds, I'm evolving that quarterly plan. 00:24:14.540 |
What I'm working on each week influences how that quarterly plan itself evolves. 00:24:18.300 |
By the time I get to the end of a quarter, I have such detailed, 00:24:22.620 |
frequent, intimate knowledge of that plan, how it evolved, how it played out. 00:24:27.460 |
I know it, I've been making adjustments all the way along. 00:24:31.620 |
So in some sense, the review, the knowledge you gain by here's my plan, 00:24:35.380 |
how did it go, that feedback loop is much tighter. 00:24:37.460 |
It's happening every week, every week as you build your new weekly plan 00:24:40.820 |
and adjust your quarterly plan, use your quarterly plan to adjust your weekly plan. 00:24:45.380 |
And so to me, it feels artificial to then say, well, let me now 00:24:49.100 |
sit down and really think about what happened that quarter. 00:24:56.460 |
By the time I get to the end of it, I'm sort of ready to move on. 00:24:58.780 |
All right, so here's another quarterly plan related question to piggyback on here. 00:25:07.140 |
Sarah says, what exactly do you include in your quarterly plan? 00:25:11.340 |
I'm a professor and I work at a teaching intensive college. 00:25:16.940 |
Do you include your teaching in your quarterly plan? 00:25:19.140 |
For instance, should prep course be an objective on that plan 00:25:26.580 |
OK, so Sarah, no, teaching should not be on your quarterly plan. 00:25:31.180 |
You'll teach your course whether or not your quarterly plan says to or not. 00:25:34.700 |
So to put that on the plan, your mind is going to pick up. 00:25:42.340 |
Like I don't I don't need to see that on the plan. 00:25:44.140 |
I would say reserve your quarterly plan for two things. 00:25:46.740 |
Your plan on how you're going to make progress on large, long 00:25:50.940 |
term autonomous projects where it's not obvious how that work has to be structured. 00:26:00.100 |
This is a good place to lay out like, OK, for this quarter ahead, 00:26:05.460 |
And I would suggest when possible, being a little bit more detailed, like, OK, 00:26:09.580 |
I'm looking at my quarter ahead, I'm working on a big writing project, 00:26:20.020 |
Where can I consistently find time to work on this paper? 00:26:22.740 |
OK, what I really need to do is make the first half of Fridays 00:26:26.340 |
and Wednesday afternoons really need to be, you know, walk in, 00:26:30.340 |
go to the library, work on the research paper. 00:26:32.140 |
I think that's the only way I'm going to get all this together 00:26:33.980 |
in time by this deadline at the end of the semester. 00:26:37.660 |
So it's not just what you're going to work on, 00:26:41.780 |
And this is decisions that you actually have to think through. 00:26:46.860 |
Like I have a course, I always prep my course and know how that works. 00:26:51.500 |
Where it's not obvious how you're going to make progress, 00:26:54.580 |
figure out not just how much you're going to get done, but if possible, 00:26:57.140 |
the structure of that work, the rhythm of that work. 00:26:59.740 |
Also use your quarterly plan for reminders about heuristics, 00:27:03.860 |
systems and habits that you are trying out or trying to make more regular. 00:27:07.980 |
I'm reading every day at lunch hour, I'm doing a 20 minute to do 00:27:12.580 |
block at the end of each day is I'm doing my shutdown routine, whatever it is, 00:27:16.740 |
whatever like heuristics or habits you're trying to ingrain. 00:27:20.300 |
Quarterly plan is a great place to write those down so that every week 00:27:23.540 |
when you make your weekly plan, you get a reminder. 00:27:28.420 |
So that's what should be in your quarterly plan, the non-regular. 00:27:45.420 |
My to do list keeps on growing, my productivity system uses 00:27:50.660 |
to do this Google Calendar and Notion, but for the past month, I'm falling behind on my work. 00:27:55.180 |
There are many days when I don't check my list or forget to create a daily plan or monthly plan, 00:27:59.980 |
I tried to reorder my mobile home screen many times. 00:28:05.780 |
Can you suggest a way to be efficient with my productivity system? 00:28:12.060 |
I find it very hard to believe that your strategy of reordering your mobile home screen 00:28:18.940 |
did not solve all of your productivity problems. 00:28:22.620 |
If you read, read my books or see my appearances, I really focus on 00:28:28.460 |
icons on your mobile home screen and configuration settings in your productivity software. 00:28:34.420 |
You understand how Elon Musk gets done what he gets done? 00:28:39.300 |
His icons are in the right folders on his phone. 00:28:42.780 |
I am, of course, being sarcastic and I'm going to I don't mean I'm going to use you sort of as a straw man here, Mukul, 00:28:49.900 |
to try to make some larger points for the audience. 00:28:51.980 |
What you were describing to me in this question is not a productivity system. 00:28:58.460 |
So for you to tell me about my productivity system is to do as Google Calendar and Notion. 00:29:03.300 |
Why am I still falling behind and not getting things done? 00:29:07.220 |
That's like me coming to you and being like, let me tell you about my exercise routine. 00:29:10.580 |
I bought a Peloton, I own some weights and I have a rowing machine. 00:29:14.060 |
So why am I not losing weight and getting stronger? 00:29:16.820 |
You would say, well, you haven't told me anything about what your actual fitness habits are, 00:29:22.060 |
like when you exercise, how much you exercise, how much what you eat, how this fits into your life. 00:29:26.460 |
You just listed exercise machines that you own. 00:29:30.740 |
So I think what we need to do is get back to basics. 00:29:34.140 |
You need to build a system, forget the tools, you need to build a system from the ground up. 00:29:40.020 |
You need to start small, start simple, get a feel for that, and then you can start adding in the complexity. 00:29:46.740 |
You're not going to solve your problem of being scattered and procrastinating and having too much to do by jumping straight into really complexity. 00:29:59.260 |
So the easiest thing you can do is if you go to my YouTube channel, YouTube.com/CalNewportMedia, 00:30:09.500 |
So I have this series called Core Ideas, where I recorded videos on some of the core ideas I talk about. 00:30:15.340 |
Go back and watch my core idea time management video. 00:30:21.460 |
For the sake of our audience now, I'm going to excerpt out a sort of starting point for you. 00:30:26.060 |
I think where you are now is you need to go all the way back to the basics and start by considering what I call the productivity funnel. 00:30:34.220 |
The collection of three layers of systems that need to be in place to help you successfully navigate the universe of all possible things you could be doing at the top of the funnel to things that you actually accomplish that comes out of the bottom of the funnel. 00:30:50.220 |
In between those two things, mediating the universe of everything, what you actually do, we have three levels. 00:30:57.540 |
What is your system or philosophy for figuring out what you do, what you agree to do, what you take on? 00:31:07.780 |
Organize and make plans around what you have agreed to do, and at the very bottom level, you have execution. 00:31:15.020 |
How do you actually in the moment properly execute what needs to be done? 00:31:20.380 |
When people are just getting started with time management, this is where I have them start and I have them start simple on each of these levels. 00:31:31.780 |
I'm assuming you're doing too many things in a fit of ambition. 00:31:36.100 |
You've just said, I'm going to learn this language, I'm going to become a YouTuber, I'm going to learn how to program, I'm going to get promotion over here. 00:31:41.660 |
Let's cut this down to many fewer things and have some sort of coherent, simple, but coherent philosophy for what you agree to, how many missions you actually want to be pursuing. 00:31:51.580 |
Maybe you have one in your current job that you're pursuing to help you get promoted faster and one on your side hustle. 00:31:58.980 |
With organization, I mean, you have to keep track of and organize things. 00:32:03.780 |
If you watch that video on YouTube, that's where I talk about multiscale planning, daily, weekly, quarterly planning. 00:32:09.900 |
So you could watch that video and you can start that. 00:32:11.860 |
Or it could be as simple as just, I have a place where everything is written down. 00:32:19.180 |
When new things come onto my plate, it gets captured. 00:32:24.020 |
I have a notebook with me at all times, and I transfer that over to my list or my calendar. 00:32:31.100 |
You can start simple, just have something working there. 00:32:35.260 |
How do you actually accomplish things when it's time to execute? 00:32:45.180 |
And when I'm doing this thing, I'm not also checking my phone. 00:32:50.140 |
A lot of young people, Mukul, I don't know that you're young, but I'm just assuming from your elaboration that you are. 00:32:55.460 |
Have this rough approximation of productivity where they just throw a lot of frenetic activity at their day. 00:33:02.580 |
I'm over here and I'm on YouTube and jumping over here. 00:33:14.460 |
And the best way to produce is one thing at a time, giving it your full concentration. 00:33:17.740 |
So start with the funnel selection, organization, execution, have an idea for each. 00:33:25.620 |
But start clear, know what you're trying to do, simple systems, 00:33:30.220 |
and you can start building up the more complexity from there. 00:33:33.020 |
But I think this is definitely Mukul, a back to basics, a back to basics move. 00:33:37.420 |
And if all of that fails, make your iPhone screen grayscale. 00:33:41.860 |
That was a big popular hit back when I was promoting digital minimalism. 00:33:47.420 |
All the tech types were like, I know the secret to being distracted by my phone. 00:33:52.260 |
I figured out how to make my iPhone screen black and white. 00:33:56.340 |
And then it's not as distracting and it won't pull my attention in. 00:33:59.820 |
It's all about if I just have the one hack, the one hack. 00:34:04.180 |
And if you're a tech person, it has to be a hack that's like a little bit technically complicated 00:34:07.780 |
because then it's it's a conceivable to you that this is why no one else is doing it, 00:34:12.740 |
because it's a little bit hard to figure out how to change your your phone in the grayscale. 00:34:15.860 |
And it's always a dream by doing one kind of complicated technical thing on my computer. 00:34:26.300 |
That's what a lot of like that's how they hook you and they try to like 00:34:32.860 |
The weatherman, the weatherman had a golf tip. 00:34:37.420 |
I don't know if you know, is the weatherman had this golf tip. 00:34:41.660 |
And so Funkhauser was Marty Funkhauser was starting to tell 00:34:46.660 |
Larry, the weatherman, who's like an actual weatherman, 00:34:50.780 |
like has this great golf tip and it changed my game. 00:34:53.740 |
And I mean, I did this one thing and I've been swing natural. 00:34:59.340 |
And it's like a season long thing that he never gets to tip 00:35:02.620 |
because, of course, he accuses the weatherman of falsely forecasting rain 00:35:06.860 |
so that he can get the golf course like better tee times at the golf course. 00:35:11.260 |
And Funkhauser says, I don't feel right giving you the tip. 00:35:17.220 |
Mookle is probably looking for the equivalent of the weatherman's tip 00:35:22.620 |
If your notion set up is just properly hooked 00:35:26.580 |
with a Zapier script to the drafts install on your phone, 00:35:34.780 |
Well, the marketing for golf and productivity tools is like really good. 00:35:42.020 |
Because there's all these golf professional golfers that like my productivity stuff. 00:35:45.780 |
So why have we not brought these two worlds together? 00:35:47.980 |
I think it's starting to you get a lot of professional golfer. 00:35:57.220 |
Deep swing, you know, somehow like meld those two worlds together. 00:36:03.380 |
It's our test, too, because the city opens going on right now. 00:36:06.860 |
Yeah, that's like our tennis players don't know me as much. 00:36:09.340 |
I haven't really come across a lot of tennis players who are deep work people. 00:36:20.660 |
I haven't I haven't heard the voice of a listener. 00:36:31.260 |
Louis. Shout out from a fellow elder millennial. 00:36:34.100 |
When reading a nonfiction book proposal, agents and editors 00:36:38.220 |
want to see proof that you have an audience that will buy your book, 00:36:41.420 |
and the default option is a large social media following 00:36:44.740 |
or even a moderate one that you're willing to spend the time to leverage. 00:36:48.420 |
Not only do I not have a large social media presence, 00:36:51.900 |
but my book itself is critical of social media in the neighborhood 00:36:57.540 |
So how do you suggest approaching agents when you're not just saying 00:37:00.700 |
I don't have a large social media presence, but also my deep work 00:37:04.780 |
productivity, my ethical priorities and the actual ideas of my book 00:37:11.660 |
How do you approach this with your own books? 00:37:14.380 |
Did you find it a hard sell or were you easily able to convince your agents 00:37:18.540 |
and editor that you had equally valuable non-social media channels 00:37:24.180 |
Is this even possible for a new author who's not a high profile professor 00:37:28.540 |
with a proven academic track record in writing like you? 00:37:32.300 |
Thank you so much for your time and for your work. 00:37:43.300 |
What sells a lot of copies of a book is the book. 00:37:47.060 |
Like the most important thing is write a book. 00:37:49.060 |
A lot of people are going to like and when they read it, 00:37:55.300 |
The easiest way to sell books to a publisher is to have sold a lot of books 00:38:01.180 |
So that's what you really want to care about. 00:38:03.620 |
This book is too good to be ignored by the audience I am trying to reach. 00:38:06.660 |
If they read this book, they're going to have to share it. 00:38:09.700 |
In terms of other channels other than social media, 00:38:13.660 |
publishers talk a lot about social media, but it's not necessarily 00:38:18.340 |
I think email lists are considered more powerful. 00:38:20.420 |
So the conversion rate of an email list into book purchases 00:38:27.780 |
Social media has been pretty much a mixed bag for moving people to buy books. 00:38:31.220 |
So there are obviously are authors who have built up these large 00:38:38.300 |
There's a category of these authors I'm going to put aside for now. 00:38:40.820 |
But for a lot of people, I'm a genre fiction writer, 00:38:44.060 |
and I've kind of built up the social media following. 00:38:45.860 |
I'm a business book writer, and I have, you know, 80,000 followers. 00:38:56.180 |
Great. I've tweeted to my Twitter following a lot about my book. 00:38:59.820 |
It's not going to make the difference between is this a hundred 00:39:02.220 |
thousand copy seller or a five thousand copy seller. Right. 00:39:05.900 |
So so in the end, social media doesn't do that much. 00:39:07.860 |
The one exception category, of course, is there's there's a kind of a rare 00:39:12.300 |
there's a rare category where you do a type of highly personal 00:39:16.900 |
nonfiction writing where you have this relationship. 00:39:20.940 |
So I'm thinking like a Glennon Doyle type situation here where you have this 00:39:24.580 |
this relationship, this audience that you built up. 00:39:27.860 |
You were a first mover in a particular type of social media environment. 00:39:30.980 |
And you have this audience that has this personal relationship with you. 00:39:37.020 |
And they feel like they really know you and your book is exactly that. 00:39:42.380 |
So there is that small category where essentially your business is social media 00:39:46.540 |
and you're using that to jumpstart book sales. 00:39:50.060 |
And you're not going to get that by just deciding today. 00:39:56.020 |
In other words, if you're in that situation, you're already in that situation. 00:39:59.300 |
The book is probably the second thing you're doing. 00:40:01.660 |
It's not something you can engineer from scratch. 00:40:03.180 |
So for most people, it doesn't make a huge different email list convert more. 00:40:06.740 |
But if you want to build an email list, you have to have something 00:40:09.140 |
interesting to say if you want to build an online audience. 00:40:12.180 |
You have to have a topic people care about with a unique point of view 00:40:15.300 |
about that topic that catches people's attention or is aspirational. 00:40:19.300 |
And you have to be uniquely suited to have that point of view. 00:40:24.860 |
And I would care much more about my email list size than I would my social media 00:40:31.140 |
So, yes, you can build an online audience with those rules. 00:40:34.060 |
Email list, I would say podcast following matters 00:40:40.580 |
But if you're not willing to do that or you're not really in a space, 00:40:53.820 |
I don't have this huge following, but this book is good. 00:40:55.900 |
And you know what? Publishers are desperate for good books. 00:40:58.260 |
They need well-written books that audiences will like in their pipeline. 00:41:03.180 |
And they have a hard time finding enough of those books to put into the pipeline. 00:41:07.740 |
So you do what you can to get your book in the pipeline. 00:41:10.140 |
You put your energy into making that book too good to be ignored, not into 00:41:14.980 |
I'm going to spend an hour a day to build up a 15000 person Twitter following 00:41:22.620 |
You've talked about the book thing several times, and it got me thinking a lot just 00:41:28.660 |
about. How many people there are, because then the same thing 00:41:32.220 |
with like TV shows and movies, you know, because you just. 00:41:35.860 |
There's such a big audience, but there's so many niche audiences like so. 00:41:40.460 |
There's a lot of audiences and it's a it's the economics of book publishing. 00:41:50.380 |
And I don't completely understand all these details, but like you have to have a full 00:41:53.900 |
pipeline of a lot of things out there, like in other words, the economics of like 00:41:58.580 |
we just do a few number of books, but they're all like big swings and famous authors. 00:42:03.380 |
And that's all it is, doesn't generate enough revenue. 00:42:06.420 |
Right. So so if you're putting out lots of different books, most of which you do not 00:42:10.100 |
pay a big advance for, it just keeps books selling in the pipeline. 00:42:13.620 |
Now, in the end, maybe I don't sell 100000 copies of books. 00:42:19.740 |
That's fine. But you need that 500 books is 500 sales. 00:42:23.580 |
So if you have a thousand authors that are each moving their 500 copy, now you've 00:42:30.340 |
So you, they need a lot of books, even though most of them, they're not going to 00:42:33.300 |
ever print that many copies of most of them are not going to sell a ton. 00:42:39.860 |
They got to have things to put on the shelves. 00:42:45.620 |
We have to make a lot of revenue needs to come in. 00:42:48.460 |
We got to move a lot of books to bookstores like that, to have that, to have that 00:42:53.740 |
Probably same for a lot of markets like shoes, clothes, streaming. 00:42:59.020 |
Like we have to have, we just need a lot of content. 00:43:03.100 |
So if you're like an actual show runner that knows how to produce a network 00:43:10.900 |
Just do something because we need to fill, we have to have 50 new shows a month. 00:43:15.380 |
Like we have to fill, we have to fill the content here. 00:43:18.300 |
You know, the issue with all this, like not, not the let's, let's diverge. 00:43:23.780 |
The difference is when you get, or the issue is, I talked about this in a recent 00:43:27.220 |
episode, but when you get technologies that democratize access to the media 00:43:36.020 |
So now anyone can produce a podcast or maybe with writing, instead of having to 00:43:41.700 |
go through a publisher, you could publish on a blog or something like this, right. 00:43:44.900 |
Or instead of going to a TV network, you can do YouTube. 00:43:50.780 |
And a lot of stuff needs to go into these pipelines and there's a, we need good 00:43:54.860 |
stuff, the mistake is to think therefore anything I do as the amateur content 00:44:04.460 |
And that's the problem is like right now, if you're a proven show runner, it's not 00:44:10.700 |
hard to get a deal to do something with the streamer. 00:44:12.460 |
If you're you and I calling Netflix, you're not going to get a deal with the 00:44:17.220 |
streamer because we can't actually, the stuff we're producing is not at the level. 00:44:20.260 |
So there's like a lot more levels for professional quality stuff. 00:44:22.620 |
There's a lot more opportunities for that all across the media. 00:44:25.140 |
But if you're not doing professional quality stuff, you're 00:44:28.820 |
So like with writing, they need books, but it has to be a professional, like 00:44:34.220 |
you got to be a good writer or something unique to say who, who's, you know, all 00:44:37.780 |
the things have to come together for you to actually sell a book to a publisher. 00:44:41.580 |
Now, if you, if you match that criteria, like, great, we're glad you're here. 00:44:46.900 |
Just like we need to do as many, you know, Netflix deals as we can. 00:44:50.460 |
But if you think like, oh, I just had, I've always had this idea for a book about how 00:44:54.100 |
like parents pressure us too much in my own childhood. 00:44:59.900 |
You're not, they got the camcorder calling Hulu and saying like, I want to do a 00:45:06.020 |
So that's the, that's the one point I think about these media revolutions. 00:45:10.780 |
It, it lowers the gates for professional stuff to get out there, which allows a 00:45:15.420 |
wider variety of professional stuff to get out there. 00:45:19.420 |
It allows new voices to get into the game, but it doesn't mean that 00:45:23.700 |
Like the threshold is just, the threshold is just as high. 00:45:26.980 |
So we're going to use a lot of metaphors here. 00:45:29.460 |
There's like this, this gate or whatever it is, this, uh, obstacle you have 00:45:35.860 |
Uh, we've opened up more doors, so you can go all up and down this obstacle 00:45:40.780 |
and jump in, but you still have to be able to jump over it. 00:45:42.980 |
So it's better than when there was just one door, like the HBO door or whatever, 00:45:46.660 |
because like, there's more people who could jump through that 00:45:49.940 |
Now we have enough doors that everyone who could jump over this. 00:45:54.260 |
But the problem is still most people can't jump over it. 00:46:04.940 |
This, this will publish a social media thing. 00:46:08.340 |
I mean, I think they're kind of, they get it. 00:46:10.580 |
They're like, yeah, I mean, I guess it's nice that you have an audience. 00:46:14.060 |
I mean, look, if you, if you have an awesome book, like we want to publish 00:46:16.540 |
this awesome book, you know, you can't, again, unless you're like Glennon Doyle, 00:46:22.260 |
like there's these, these few exceptions where this is just, but in those cases, 00:46:27.100 |
often all you're really doing is renting your massive audience to the publisher. 00:46:33.260 |
So from a financial standpoint, it doesn't mean in those cases, if you're 00:46:36.220 |
like I have, because I was early to Instagram and I have this massive 00:46:40.660 |
audience on there and I'm taking the exact type of stuff I tell this audience 00:46:44.340 |
on Instagram and put into a book, you will be a New York times bestseller. 00:46:49.260 |
You know, 10% of that audience, maybe they'll buy the book, but you're just 00:46:56.580 |
And there's way higher profit margin ways to monetize that audience. 00:47:00.740 |
So maybe you're doing it for credibility or you're doing it for exposure. 00:47:03.220 |
Um, so, so that's the other thing when these people have these very large 00:47:06.740 |
audiences and they sort of temporarily have a bestseller, they're just selling 00:47:11.420 |
And it's a very different picture than your talented author produces something 00:47:15.180 |
really great and word spreads and that more and more people find that book. 00:47:20.060 |
That it's, it's two different things going on. 00:47:23.820 |
They, I mean, obviously my publishers don't bother me because I'm known 00:47:27.100 |
for not using social media, but I do do remember for so good. 00:47:32.540 |
They did bring in the social media specialist to one of the first 00:47:38.380 |
The young woman who's in charge, like, let me help you, um, optimize all the 00:47:44.500 |
And that was the first and last time my publishers have brought in a social 00:47:50.980 |
And the reality is I've managed to sell a couple of books, even 00:47:58.420 |
Speaking of books, first episode we've recorded in the studio 00:48:06.540 |
So let's go over the books I read in July, 2022. 00:48:11.460 |
As long time listeners know, I aim to read five books a month. 00:48:19.220 |
The first book I read in July was from zero to maker by David Lang. 00:48:38.500 |
Adam Savage's the myth busters memoir about being a maker or whatever. 00:48:45.180 |
So I read this book and it was, um, it was about someone who left his office 00:48:52.060 |
Got really into being a, the DIY maker community and started a company about 00:49:01.060 |
And it was a book he wrote for make magazines, publishing imprint 00:49:07.700 |
So I think it was a really interesting premise. 00:49:10.100 |
The book is, you know, it's, it didn't come together because 00:49:17.980 |
That's kind of interesting, his story, but partially like, 00:49:26.180 |
And so that, that mixed together, I think kind of let the steam 00:49:34.820 |
The next book I read was the monster's bones by David Randall. 00:49:41.100 |
Uh, this is one of the big nonfiction releases I think of this summer. 00:49:45.580 |
So it's a, it's a nonfiction book, uh, about the start of the American 00:49:51.900 |
history museum in New York, and in particular, the fight to get the 00:49:55.500 |
first major dinosaur bone exhibits, like the, the complete dinosaur bones. 00:50:01.180 |
Uh, in your museum and getting these, the first Tyrannosaur, I believe is 00:50:06.980 |
what really helped the American museum of history in New York really take off. 00:50:10.940 |
And it focuses on this really interesting character, actual name, Barnum Brown. 00:50:16.900 |
Was this, uh, Kansas farm boy who is not from the sort of elite educated 00:50:24.100 |
bastions that the, the big bone hunters were from the Copes, the Osborns. 00:50:30.420 |
But he became like the world's best dinosaur bone hunter. 00:50:36.820 |
He found the first like large, he found the first Tyrannosaur, uh, and a couple 00:50:41.980 |
other major first, and he just was a natural born bone hunter and it sort of 00:50:46.420 |
follows him and the story of all these museums trying to hunt down these bones. 00:50:55.220 |
Yeah, I don't know what fool gave this book to me, but I read a man for all 00:51:02.860 |
This came from Jesse, uh, who thought I would like it. 00:51:10.420 |
He was a mathematics professor who then, uh, left academia, start basically 00:51:16.820 |
like a quantitative hedge fund, but also like a lot of interesting things. 00:51:19.940 |
I mean, here's, here's the right way to summarize this guy. 00:51:22.700 |
He's still alive, but he's in his like upper eighties right now. 00:51:25.560 |
Um, there's a period in this book where he's in Reno with Claude Shannon and a 00:51:34.100 |
minute, one of the first miniaturized computers to ever be built that they're 00:51:38.460 |
using to time the roulette wheel and make money with a gambling, gambling system. 00:51:47.140 |
Like he's just interested in, uh, he, he wrote a book called beat the 00:51:50.140 |
dealer famously in the sixties where it's the first time someone had really. 00:51:54.100 |
Used a computing power to actually run through and calculate the problem, win 00:51:58.740 |
probabilities of different strategies against blackjack. 00:52:01.060 |
And he figured out if you do the right type of, um, what's the optimal 00:52:04.300 |
strategy without card counting, uh, the dealer, she'll had an advantage. 00:52:08.100 |
And then with card counting, what the optimal strategies are. 00:52:10.580 |
And he, he ran this all punch card programs through computers and figured 00:52:14.540 |
out like, yeah, you could, you could have an edge on the casino with these systems. 00:52:19.020 |
So that's another thing, you know, he got into, then he realized at some 00:52:22.260 |
point that wall street was like a much more interesting casino and they 00:52:25.700 |
couldn't kick you out just because they didn't like you were winning too much. 00:52:28.740 |
And so then he went there and he made a lot of money in wall street. 00:52:31.700 |
They were, he was early to sort of hedging strategies. 00:52:36.300 |
He figured out early a, a version of basically the black Scholes 00:52:40.260 |
derivative pricing formula, which one black and Scholes, the Nobel prize. 00:52:48.420 |
That's kind of what they want that microeconomics Nobel prize for, but 00:52:57.860 |
He was on Ferris twice in like the last several months. 00:53:04.540 |
So I listened to him and like, when I first started listening to the first 00:53:08.060 |
episode, he was just like talking about working out and I was like, 00:53:11.020 |
And then I found out he was like 88 years old. 00:53:13.140 |
And I was like, this guy's so then I started looking into him more. 00:53:17.980 |
Jesse, like one thing I came away with, it was like the writing between the 00:53:22.260 |
lines in this book is I don't know if he's frustrated about this. 00:53:27.100 |
He's obviously like a brilliant guy, but there's, there's all these areas where 00:53:33.700 |
And this comes up again and again in the book, he was early to something 00:53:37.620 |
that eventually became major, like one, someone, a Nobel prize, innovated 00:53:42.860 |
And he would always get to the point where, okay, I more or less know what's 00:53:49.580 |
And then someone would come in later and sort of do the work more 00:53:56.060 |
So like he had these kinds of breakthroughs in economics, but never 00:54:00.460 |
Other people did and became world famous economist, had these breakthroughs 00:54:04.820 |
and how to run hedge funds, made himself, you know, millions of dollars, but 00:54:10.580 |
he's defensive about, he was never a billion dollar hedge fund. 00:54:14.580 |
He was never one of the big guys, like the guys who swung in and like leveraged 00:54:18.980 |
up and push these ideas and, and, and made the huge money. 00:54:26.700 |
I mean, the one thing that happened to his fund was there was a little bit of 00:54:34.660 |
So I think if that didn't happen, who knows what, but also he'd never 00:54:41.860 |
Well, I think he wanted to hang out with his family and his wife and he wanted to 00:54:49.180 |
So I think he's like a great, he's an interesting case study for 00:54:52.620 |
And like, I think he's someone that was definitely thinking, I've got this 00:54:59.100 |
Cause he's just like wanders into these areas and does like good work. 00:55:06.260 |
I could go all in with this brain on something. 00:55:09.820 |
And I think for him, it could be essentially like make a run for a Nobel 00:55:15.100 |
type thing or whatever, like getting a endowed chair at U Chicago or something 00:55:18.860 |
like really like being a big guy in economics, or he could have gone all in 00:55:23.820 |
and be like, I want to be, um, you know, I want billion plus net worth. 00:55:28.420 |
And like both of those things were probably on the table for him. 00:55:30.420 |
And he said, instead of I'm going to do is I'm going to take advantage of this 00:55:32.900 |
brain, which means I can, I can come in and out of a lot of things, like make 00:55:37.860 |
enough money to be comfortable, explore, do interesting things, have control over 00:55:44.220 |
And, and I think you're right to put out the deep life, because if you're looking 00:55:47.060 |
at the buckets of the deep life and trying to think through, how am I going to. 00:55:51.700 |
It's not a bad strategy if you're super smart. 00:55:54.380 |
It's like, how can I use this to, to really have a lot of autonomy, don't worry 00:55:59.580 |
about money, but also be able to, he got really into working out, surfing, like 00:56:06.660 |
I can shut things down, do nothing for a few years. 00:56:10.340 |
Um, I think initially when he was first, you know, after he got his doctorate, he 00:56:15.260 |
was, cause he mentions in the book, he didn't have a ton of money. 00:56:18.340 |
So then he made some money off the publishing the book. 00:56:22.060 |
And then I think once he started making it, he started making it pretty decent. 00:56:27.100 |
And then he realized he was probably set, you know? 00:56:34.100 |
Um, but in the period of time where he was like looking at where to go. 00:56:38.220 |
Like he was a good professor, not a great professor. 00:56:39.940 |
Like everything, there was this, everything he did was competitive 00:56:43.100 |
fields where he was good, not great, but he moved through a lot of the fields. 00:56:46.260 |
Like he wasn't at a top economics department, but actually it was doing 00:56:51.140 |
Uh, he wasn't one of the big, you know, hedge fund guys that's New York when 00:56:57.780 |
buying the a hundred million dollar, whatever, uh, but he did well in the 00:57:01.620 |
hedge funds, he, he like did well in the gambling, so, you know, so I like it. 00:57:06.540 |
Then I think it's, it's like, he's not just interesting, but it's a nice 00:57:09.980 |
case study of being incredibly intentional about, I have this asset. 00:57:17.260 |
He has a lot of like good practical advice too. 00:57:19.260 |
Like on his interview with Tim, just about he's even talking about just 00:57:24.020 |
like personal investments, like risk-taking, I guess, a human stuff like that. 00:57:28.380 |
So yeah, definitely listen to the interviews as well. 00:57:31.180 |
So then I also, I listened to this one actually, uh, dilettante by Dana Brown. 00:57:38.620 |
It's, it's, it's like the devil wears Prada, but written by the assistant 00:57:52.900 |
Like, so Dana Brown, at least the way he tells the story is that he was 00:57:57.500 |
bartending in the village, not really going anywhere. 00:58:02.860 |
And for various random reasons, ends up an assistant to the, the new sort of 00:58:09.860 |
hotshot, splashy head of vanity fair in the nineties when magazine publishing 00:58:17.980 |
And he kind of works his way up and he ended up a deputy 00:58:21.060 |
So it's kind of interesting to hear the stories. 00:58:25.820 |
You get, you get an insight into what Condé Nast, Condé Nast was like in the 00:58:31.620 |
nineties when it was the most, one of the most powerful, because magazines 00:58:37.380 |
Pre-internet and the, be at one of their flagship publications, this, 00:58:40.500 |
the, the, the money, the expense accounts, the, uh, and so it was kind 00:58:44.980 |
Dana Brown stories, like kind of interesting. 00:58:47.100 |
It implicit, he doesn't really make this very, he's not really clear about it, 00:58:51.580 |
but it's kind of obvious that he got hired in part because this guy has like 00:58:57.140 |
And like, I think he was like a very attractive guy and it was part of the, 00:59:02.060 |
And then he was just incredibly hardworking and sort of, sort of worked 00:59:06.180 |
his way up, but it's not what he was doing is not that interesting. 00:59:08.740 |
So the stories he was trying to spin, it's like, yeah, it's just a hard job. 00:59:11.900 |
Like you gotta go to the, you have to go to all these events and work the door at 00:59:14.620 |
the Oscar party and, and run stuff around town. 00:59:17.420 |
But I think that the interesting thing to me was just hearing about. 00:59:20.100 |
All that was going on with magazine publishing. 00:59:23.860 |
You know, I have to do, I have to do a lot of Conde Nast online trainings 00:59:30.900 |
because, uh, because I'm a contributor at the New Yorker. 00:59:35.260 |
I have a newyorker.com email address, which I don't use, but I have a 00:59:38.420 |
newyorker.com email address and they're owned by Conde Nast. 00:59:42.220 |
And they just have these rules, a giant company. 00:59:45.220 |
Like everyone who has a newyorker.com email address has to do all 00:59:50.460 |
So I, I do like a non-trivial number of like watching the videos 00:59:55.780 |
And it's like my only intersection with corporate life. 01:00:00.180 |
I know university life is its own thing, but that's its own little weird system. 01:00:03.900 |
My only intersection with, you know, big company, corporate, the it department 01:00:09.300 |
needs you to do trainings is that newyorker.com email address. 01:00:12.700 |
So, and because I don't use the address, I don't get the message. 01:00:19.380 |
There's these like increasingly urgent series of messages. 01:00:22.220 |
It's like, you're over, you have to do your training. 01:00:26.940 |
Like, this is a problem getting yelled at because it gets escalated up. 01:00:33.140 |
And then eventually at some point, someone will just. 01:00:34.980 |
Who knows me will email me directly to like my actual address, but like, you 01:00:38.900 |
got to do these, you got to do these trainings, like we're getting yelled 01:00:41.940 |
at by the ghost of Cyhurst, you know, anyways, it's funny. 01:00:45.620 |
So that's, that's my dose of, of corporateness. 01:00:51.780 |
Uh, and I'll give you the backstory, the four agreements by Don McGuell. 01:01:00.540 |
Somebody was talking about it is either you or Rogan talks about it. 01:01:06.500 |
But the reason why I read this is like, as of this week, it came on 1997. 01:01:11.020 |
I just checked before we recorded number four on Amazon, Amazon charts. 01:01:15.940 |
Maybe holiday gifted it to Rogan when he went on the show recently, he 01:01:32.020 |
I was like this, why is this book from the nineties? 01:01:35.980 |
You know, decades later, like top four, top five of like 01:01:42.500 |
I don't know that I got an answer from reading it. 01:01:45.740 |
It's for the four agreements, like four, like agreements 01:01:51.180 |
And they're like good life advice, you know, like be honest and don't 01:02:09.220 |
Like, so the guy is claiming like there's this whole claim up front that this is, 01:02:12.700 |
this is wisdom from like the Olmecs is sort of a lost ancient 01:02:20.340 |
And then he's like, I've, it's been passed through oral tradition. 01:02:23.780 |
He sets that up early on, but then the rest of the book is just standard. 01:02:27.900 |
You know, self-help like you should be honest. 01:02:31.380 |
It's here's why, like, it's, you don't want to get caught. 01:02:33.060 |
Like, it's not like throughout he's like really pulling from an 01:02:37.780 |
So I don't know what it's just somehow this hit it's good advice. 01:02:41.260 |
I have heard Rogan talk about is like my whole life is built on it. 01:02:45.420 |
Maybe that's why it's number four, because I guess it's that guy 01:02:54.980 |
So then I looked up because I was looking this up. 01:03:00.100 |
As of this moment, the top five books this week on Amazon charts. 01:03:08.380 |
I was going to quiz you because to be on the Amazon charts, it's not like 01:03:13.780 |
It's like the volume of books sold this week. 01:03:16.420 |
Number one volume, which it could be different than because. 01:03:19.460 |
Uh, different books will trade places in the number one spot just because, you 01:03:25.260 |
know, oh, in the last hour or something happened and now I'm temporarily number 01:03:28.420 |
one and then I disappear and someone else gets it, but the Amazon charts. 01:03:31.060 |
But yeah, so top five, you see it right there. 01:03:46.740 |
Oh, he told me, he told me about what he was working on. 01:03:51.300 |
And the one year anniversary of Atomic Habits. 01:03:55.660 |
I did a interview with him or he interviewed me for a, like he was doing a bunch of 01:04:00.180 |
videos to celebrate the one year anniversary. 01:04:03.300 |
And then afterwards he was telling me about what he was working on. 01:04:07.300 |
All I remember was thinking the moment like, oh, that's good. 01:04:09.460 |
So he's got a good one waiting, but why would you rush it? 01:04:15.860 |
I mean, you're like, look, I don't know if this is the conversation he's happening, 01:04:19.300 |
but I'll tell him the comp I'll tell you the conversation his publisher 01:04:24.980 |
Like, why do you want to cannibalize sales from yourself? 01:04:27.220 |
If you're literally the number one selling book on Amazon right now, let that play 01:04:34.300 |
If Clear came out with a followup book, you, it wouldn't just be, okay, now we 01:04:39.620 |
have all of those sales plus all the Atomic Habits, it would probably cannibalize. 01:04:42.420 |
Like you say, oh, I'm not going to get Atomic Habits. 01:04:47.260 |
What would you do if you were in that position? 01:04:51.700 |
Don't you really like writing and writing books? 01:04:55.100 |
I think it's a, I think it's a really weird position to be in. 01:04:57.860 |
It's like not a bad position because you get a lot of money and, but it's a weird 01:05:04.020 |
It's like, if you're the actor who really likes acting and then in the 01:05:07.980 |
nineties, like at the height of that, and you just have like a huge surprise 01:05:10.900 |
blockbuster, it's the, uh, like what it really changes things. 01:05:17.540 |
Like if, if, if I had like an Atomic Habits style hit, it really complicates things. 01:05:23.980 |
Cause I listened to like a lot of, I rehashed a lot of things like doing 01:05:28.300 |
So I hear what you say like four different times and you always talk about how like 01:05:38.140 |
And it's like summertime, just writing, writing, writing. 01:05:52.300 |
But like, I don't, I mean, I don't know, uh, James clear well, but it's 01:05:57.820 |
He was, he had his own thing going on and then he wrote a book. 01:06:00.940 |
So I don't know if it's not like his main thing is book writing. 01:06:03.500 |
So it's probably a different, different equation. 01:06:06.980 |
And I think Mark Manson had this issue too, after subtle art and he, and he 01:06:11.300 |
wanted to go do other things and they were like, we have to maximize blah, blah, blah. 01:06:21.100 |
And at some point it was like, I'm just going to write. 01:06:35.460 |
As she was telling me about, it's about trauma and from like a scientific 01:06:40.500 |
standpoint, like, you know, the science of trauma and how it affects people. 01:06:44.420 |
And I, and I know Oprah's heavily involved in it somehow. 01:06:47.980 |
Number three, green lights, Matt McConaughey. 01:06:51.660 |
I mean, he's like an interesting, famous guy. 01:06:59.500 |
But there's Matthew McConaughey stories in it. 01:07:01.100 |
And there's like wisdom that either sounds really wise or kind of weird, but 01:07:05.660 |
There's like this interesting, famous guy writing something that's just not 01:07:12.140 |
Then four agreements is number four and a rich dad, poor dad's number five. 01:07:17.700 |
Or said poor dad is, um, don't have a salary. 01:07:26.980 |
Um, I have a couple more questions I want to hit just because 01:07:31.500 |
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All right, let's do a couple more questions here before we call it quits 01:11:15.060 |
for the day and I go to the swimming pool and just go right up to my chin and water 01:11:22.020 |
and stay there until this temperature comes down. 01:11:26.460 |
Who asks, "How do you manage the anxiety of not yet having achieved a goal? 01:11:32.620 |
Right now, my main goal is to finish my novel. 01:11:35.660 |
I have a very good routine of writing in the morning before work and have made 01:11:39.180 |
some gains with the slow and steady approach. 01:11:41.620 |
However, in the back of my mind, I still feel stress that I'm not done. 01:11:45.580 |
How do you deal with the anxiety of wanting to achieve your goals 01:11:50.220 |
So Andrea, I'm going to be a little contrarian here. 01:11:54.940 |
I'm going to say in this case, let's listen to your anxiety. 01:11:58.700 |
The easy answer here is, "Oh, you know, anxiety is common when you're doing 01:12:05.260 |
something big and you need to just keep going." 01:12:07.020 |
I'm a believer, however, when it comes to ambitious projects, anxiety and its 01:12:13.940 |
flip side of procrastination are useful signals from your brain about how 01:12:24.380 |
Because it is possible, there's a couple of things going on here. 01:12:27.780 |
It's possible that this anxiety is actually a manifestation of your brain 01:12:32.380 |
realizing we don't really have a feasible path here towards success. 01:12:38.020 |
That this is a glorified National Novel Writing Month exercise of, we'd like the 01:12:43.700 |
idea of writing a novel, but we don't know much about novel writing. 01:12:49.100 |
We're just kind of fell in love with the idea of doing 500 words a day. 01:12:52.740 |
And this thing that's coming together, I mean, we tell ourselves this story 01:12:56.420 |
that we're going to send it out and it's going to be the next Twilight series, 01:13:03.740 |
And so you have the plan evaluation part of your brain pushing back 01:13:15.620 |
Like, do you actually have confidence that what you're doing, you're doing 01:13:18.580 |
the right activities to actually give you a chance of succeeding 01:13:22.180 |
If not, maybe think about let's learn more about this process. 01:13:33.300 |
We know what you're, we know what we're doing here. 01:13:43.180 |
Once we get this together, we're going to polish with this editor. 01:13:45.140 |
Then we're going to submit to these agents that we haven't figured out. 01:13:52.620 |
We've got something here, but if the more we drag this out, the 01:13:56.220 |
If that's the case, then the response is we got to make more 01:14:01.100 |
We need to formalize what we're doing here more, you know, Tuesday and 01:14:06.860 |
Thursdays, I'm actually have arranged my work day to end at three. 01:14:10.060 |
And I go to the library till six 30 and my husband picks up the kids. 01:14:15.860 |
I'm writing those days and all Sunday from 8:00 AM to 1:00 PM. 01:14:19.140 |
Like that's saying, let's get more into this. 01:14:21.500 |
Let's not try to make it something that doesn't barely impact your 01:14:24.500 |
schedule and no one's going to be upset about it. 01:14:27.060 |
So these are two completely different possible responses, and you have to 01:14:30.540 |
interrogate your anxiety to try to understand what's really going on. 01:14:35.500 |
Regardless of what the right answer is, is there something going on in your head? 01:14:38.900 |
That's not happy with how things are going now. 01:14:40.540 |
It's either unhappy with the whole project or it thinks that you're 01:14:46.660 |
So I think you should listen to your anxiety. 01:14:50.420 |
I think you either need to be pushing chips into the table 01:14:56.540 |
That would be my guess, given how you're feeling. 01:15:04.900 |
Karen says, I am a creative and one of my superpowers is coming up with new ideas. 01:15:11.420 |
I'm constantly thinking of new ideas, but recognize there's 01:15:17.260 |
Do you have a recommendation for how to manage one's content production when 01:15:21.100 |
there is not enough time to fully explore and assess each idea? 01:15:24.620 |
Well, Karen, in honor of the shirt that Jesse's wearing today, I'm 01:15:35.260 |
So for those who are listening, not watching, Jesse is taunting my 01:15:41.100 |
depression over the Nationals trading away Juan Soto and our sorry state of 01:15:46.220 |
our team by wearing a Washington Nationals shirt today, just to try to rub it in. 01:15:50.260 |
So let's use a stretched out, exaggerated baseball metaphor here, Karen. 01:15:54.740 |
Think about ideas like prospects in a baseball's farm system 01:16:01.620 |
You want to keep bringing in good potential prospects. 01:16:05.460 |
You have a shot at actually making it to the big show. 01:16:09.220 |
You don't want to micro reserve this and end up 30th out of 30 in the MLB by 2020. 01:16:15.660 |
But you also know that, look, most of these prospects aren't going to make it. 01:16:19.940 |
They're not going to play major league baseball. 01:16:21.380 |
What you want is a well-stocked farm system so that when you need a new idea, 01:16:27.260 |
What's the next podcast topic I'm going to talk on? 01:16:29.780 |
That there's a lot of talent in that system and you're 01:16:33.620 |
It's not going to be hard to find a good thing to write about, a good 01:16:36.140 |
thing to talk about, a good thing to put into your proposal. 01:16:38.180 |
So you want a well-stocked farm system of ideas. 01:16:43.260 |
And the goal is not, let me make sure that every one of these things gets a 01:16:46.180 |
chance or every one of these things makes it onto the major league team because 01:16:48.780 |
they won't, and the goal here is not, let's make sure there's not one of these 01:16:52.220 |
things that really has the talent, really has the ability to be a big book. 01:16:58.060 |
So long as for each book you write, there's an idea you can use for each 01:17:04.060 |
There's a player you're always able to pull up. 01:17:05.580 |
So if we're going to move past that metaphor and just speak like normal 01:17:10.100 |
people, what I'm saying here is just have a good place to capture your idea. 01:17:17.540 |
You're not going to say, Oh my God, I'm going to forget about this. 01:17:21.660 |
You can look at them real quickly to add extra notes if you have them, but then 01:17:24.860 |
just be happy with the fact that every time you need something new, you have a 01:17:29.940 |
lot of options to pull from and don't sweat over is every idea eventually 01:17:35.020 |
getting developed is every idea that could be big, actually get a shot at being big. 01:17:40.740 |
Your goal is to feel the complete good team every day so that every time you 01:17:45.140 |
write an article, you have an idea to write about every time you write a book. 01:17:50.180 |
Every time you do a podcast, you have an idea to talk about on the show. 01:17:52.980 |
If your pipeline is full, every time you need a good idea, you have multiple to 01:18:00.780 |
What's happening with all those ideas in the interim, capture them, hold ones 01:18:04.940 |
that catch your attention in the moment, and, uh, you'll do better than 01:18:13.180 |
Just as some of my readers were writing or listeners were writing in and saying 01:18:17.940 |
like, you need to do a show on baseball and the trades that happen. 01:18:22.300 |
And I said, don't tempt me because I will completely take advantage of this 01:18:26.420 |
platform to have inappropriately matched guests onto the show solely. 01:18:33.740 |
I will find baseball beat reporters and radio personalities and somehow 01:18:37.340 |
convince them that I need to come on my show to promote their podcasts or this 01:18:40.540 |
or that, just so I could interrogate them for hours about the minutiae of 01:18:43.860 |
baseball and we would alienate every single one of our listers. 01:18:47.820 |
So I will abuse this power to do a six hour long trade day, special 01:18:56.420 |
You can set up a stand like outside the park. 01:19:06.140 |
Now the guy would have, I think would be Mark Zuckerman beat reporter for Masson. 01:19:11.540 |
So he's in the clubhouse travels with the team and he's 01:19:15.980 |
That's the guy who really knows he's been doing this for over a decade. 01:19:20.700 |
So he really kind of knows the players and the people involved. 01:19:24.500 |
He's got the sources he's in the clubhouse every single day. 01:19:31.140 |
But, uh, don't let me do that because it'd be a three hour long episode. 01:19:35.940 |
That almost every one of our listeners would be very upset about. 01:19:48.940 |
That guy, Mark Zuckerman has a podcast, Nat's chat plug where they talk 01:19:55.100 |
And they have an ad, they have an ad read up front where for like a law 01:20:00.180 |
firm recruitment, whatever, and the read, they always use the same read is like, 01:20:04.900 |
we'll help you get a deal worthy of Juan Soto. 01:20:08.580 |
And I was listening to the show today and they came in and had the punch into the 01:20:12.500 |
read and now it says, this will help you get a deal worthy of caber Ruiz. 01:20:17.220 |
So it just marked like that one change in the ad read just marked all the 01:20:25.180 |
I'm not going to convince baseball personalities to come on here, trick 01:20:30.420 |
Actually, I was going to do it, but we're not going to press record. 01:20:32.980 |
I'm just going to have all these people in here and just have these long 01:20:36.740 |
conversations and they're just gonna be like, Hey, Calman, what's that? 01:20:41.300 |
When I said like, you know, it's a Jesse's editing. 01:20:53.660 |
If you like what you heard, you will like what you see. 01:20:57.820 |
Full video video of the full episodes, as well as clips is available 01:21:03.460 |
If you like what you heard, you'll also like what you read. 01:21:05.500 |
Sign up for my weekly newsletter at calnewport.com. 01:21:08.300 |
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We'll be back next week with another normal old fashioned episode.