While writing my latest book, I conducted an experiment on myself.
When I interviewed reader Lisa Van Gemert, she told me about her secret Amazon Wishlist. That she’ll reward herself with items for finishing certain tasks.
I decided to try it for myself. So to motivate myself to finish my manuscript, I promised myself a new Kindle.
It was strangely difficult to set up this reward for myself. My current Kindle really was getting old and slow, and I had $120. Why not just buy the thing?
But I held off, in the name of science. A couple things happened.
As I struggled through using my slow Kindle with little battery life, I kept reminding myself, Finish the manuscript, and you get a new one.
Then, once I finished the manuscript and got the Kindle, I was even more excited about it than I would have been had I just bought it.
Lisa’s wishlist has really inexpensive items on it. As she told me, it helps her tell herself like, “‘You finish indexes. They suck, but you did it. And you have this cute eraser that consistently reminds you of that.’”
So while the reward is valuable, so is the physical presence of the item after you’ve accomplished the goal. Indeed, every time I use my Kindle, I’m reminded that I earned it.
Since reading on my Kindle is a big part of my business, it’s going to be a tough reward to top. But the experiment worked so well, I’m trying it again. I’ve already picked out the pair of pants I’ll earn when I’m done editing.
Have you ever set up a reward for yourself?
Aphorism: “If you’ve truly created an innovative work, it’s likely to alienate as many people as it attracts. The best art divides the audience.” —Rick Rubin
Book:Meditations for Mortals (Amazon) is Oliver Burkeman’s meditations on embracing finitude.
The shift that has happened in how media is consumed has made it way more comfortable to create.
So long as you recognize that shift.
We used to be in follower mode: People would follow you on a social media platform, or even subscribe to your RSS feed. They would see everything you made.
Lots of people miss those days. They complain their followers don’t see what they create. But that actually sucked.
Follower mode put way too much pressure on the creative process. You had to get it right the first time, because everyone would see it.
It would be too embarrassing to publish two variations of the same thing. You’d scare your followers away. You just had to guess.
In feed mode, the pressure is off. You can try it a dozen different ways. Your followers will only see it if it’s better than the other things the algorithm could have shown them.
Add to that, your follower count is no longer the limit. Beat out the other stuff on the algorithm, and your reach is nearly unlimited, even with 0 followers.
You can be as cringe as you want, and hardly anyone will notice.
This is especially good news for the Leonardos. Those who find their process through exploration. Follower mode was great for the Raphaels – those freaks who could somehow plan out one version of a vision, then execute.
Follower mode was harshly judgmental and stiflingly rigid. Feed mode lets you be improvisational and iterative.
Book:The Origin of Science (Amazon) presents evidence from persistence hunters that explain how humans evolved to be scientific.
Cool: David Attenborough’s documentary of an 8-hour persistence hunt in the Kalahari.
Some people fear that by using AI, people will forget how to think.
There are two ways to think of AI: training wheels or balance bike.
I remember that learning to ride a bike as a kid was extraordinarily difficult. Borderline traumatizing.
Now I look back and think, No shit.
When you’d get close to bike-riding age, your parents would install “training wheels” on the side of a bike.
What you’d do then looked a lot like riding a bike. You could pedal, and the bike would move forward.
I shake my head at the entire society of literally billions of adults that should have known better. This was an insanely stupid way to teach kids how to ride a bike.
Out of all skills required to ride a bike, maintaining balance is clearly the hardest, by a longshot.
Instead of learning that skill, one fateful day our parents would remove our training wheels. We’d then spend the next several months in a trial-by-fire, combining the easy skill of pedaling with the horrifying skill of keeping upright.
We’d run into retaining walls and skin our knees. Collective mountains of child corpses no doubt piled up from this pedagogy of idiocy.
It wasn’t until 1997 someone thought to give kids a balance bike. Something with no pedals that they could use to actually build the most important skill. Now, thank God, balance bikes are the norm.
AI will only reduce your skills in thinking if you use it as training wheels. To mimic the actions one sees a thinking person do: such as presenting information in what seems like an organized manner.
My experience has been that if you use AI as a balance bike, your thinking skills actually improve.
The analogy of maintaining balance is apt. The sensation of your level of confidence in a subject area is a good analogue for a feeling of balance. If you let AI gently at intervals show you the sensation of balance, you become better at achieving balance – and thus proficiency in any new subject.
You find you can achieve that level on your own, until you decide to get thinner tires or graduate from a sidewalk to a raised 2×4.
If we use AI as training wheels, we will get dumber. If we use it as a balance bike, we will get smarter.
Aphorism: “It’s a shame when people don’t try their hardest because they think it will be embarrassing or it’ll be looked down upon.” —Ricky Gervais
Book:Against Democracy (Amazon) is a detailed thought experiment on the possibility of the alternative: “epistocracy.”
Slop has nothing to do with AI. The age of AI in fact has great potential to see the elimination of slop. But it’s up to us.
Slop is made when a formula is followed to create something. All the individual expression and taste is taken out of the final product.
If you press a button and expect AI to create something, you will get slop. AI works by turning the process into a formula.
But slop has been around for centuries.
If you have any pattern recognition, you’ve noticed formulaic movies, TV, music, and writing. You know what’s going to happen and it’s just cheesy and it sucks. It’s slop, and sadly most people don’t know the difference.
The Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood in the mid-1800s was rebelling against slop. The art academies in Europe had reduced Raphael’s painting style to a formula. The P.R.B. called it “slosh.”
AI actually has tremendous potential to reduce slop.
Slop proliferates because of rigid systems of organization. When there are three channels, a few record labels, one local radio station, etc. it’s too risky to let artists simply express themselves. Shareholders need to be assured what they’re doing will work. So art gets reduced to a formula.
AI just copies the formulas we’ve already been using to make safe art.
In the ‘90s, we had to decide whether to browse the Action & Adventure or Comedy section of Blockbuster Video. These walls that balkanize taste have been gradually dissolving, and AI is the bulldozer.
Marshall McLuhan called this the shift from mechanical to electric technology.
“He who does his work like a machine grows a heart like a machine.” —Marshall McLuhan
With AI not only can you do away with video-store shelves, but the BISAC subject codes for organizing books. Even hashtags are becoming obsolete. (Thank God, I hate hashtags.)
So write a novel or record an album – with your hands and mind – then let AI tell you how to categorize it. AI can then help others find it just because it has some weird quirk they specifically will enjoy. This flexible sorting isn’t possible in the rigid structures of store shelves.
It is not an exaggeration to say that AI is the most anti-slop technology in the history of humanity.
We only see more slop now because people are too afraid or have forgotten how to express themselves. Slop will only persist if humans decide it deserves to. If we accept it as art.
We’ve been doing that a long time, but admittedly, it’s been hard not to.
Eliminating slop requires us to be brave enough to create (and most importantly, seek out and consume) unique and authentic art.
Cool:The AI Water Issue is Fake is a thorough analysis of why the issue of AI water usage is blown out of proportion by sloppy and disingenuous journalism.
When I reflect on my most-intense periods of time management, it’s all kind of a blur.
Like I can open a book on my Kindle I have no recollection of having purchased much less read, and find it’s littered with highlights – so I clearly “read” it.
I recently came across a term: hurry sickness. The definitions vary, but the term immediately reminded me of the times I was most fixated on doing things faster and more efficiently, and whenever possible delegating those things.
The symptoms of hurry sickness I remember are:
Constantly rushing
Impatient, subject to emotional outbursts over minor delays
Making lots of mistakes
Poor memory
An urge to always be in motion
Thinking about the next task while doing the current one
Trying (and failing) to multitask
It’s easy for me to say of that self that I should have just calmed down or not been in such a hurry, but it felt like I had good reasons then, and it feels unfair and suspiciously convenient to judge that past self.
I was fighting hard to make it as a writer, didn’t have much other fulfilling things going on in my life, and had a less clear idea of who I was or wanted to be.
I still feel on the edge of hurry sickness sometimes but just being aware of it helps keep me from getting sucked in.
I don’t know what the cure was. Maybe it was having some success, feeling I had proven to myself what I had wanted to, less economic and social pressure living outside the U.S., or some deeper existential contentment. It’s probably all of those.
Strangely, I feel like I’m fighting as hard for my business as ever but am less hurry sick. So maybe hurry sickness really works, or maybe the incentives to be hurry sick feel too out-of-reach to bother with any longer. What feels true to me right now is that hurry sickness is just counter-productive.
Have you ever been hurry sick?
Aphorism: “He who defers the hour of living well is like the clown waiting till the river shall have flowed out. But the river still flows, and will run on.” —Horace
Cool: This is a nice heavy curtain (Amazon) which can help control light and dampen sound when recording video.
Best, David P.S. When you’re hurry-sick you’re convinced there’s too much to do.
When you get close to finishing a project, there are two ways you can use your energy.
You can either try to make the current project better, or you can call it done and move on to the next thing.
In my experience, once you reach the point you’re considering it might already be done, there’s a lopsided trade staring you in the face: The same energy it would take to make the current thing 1% better could be used to make the next thing 10% better.
That’s not to say that you can use that energy to go start-to-finish on the next thing, and it will be 10% better. It’s just automatically by doing the next thing, you’ll be able to do it better. And that 1% improvement on the current thing would be more exhausting.
That isn’t to say, either, that because it’s a lopsided trade-off that automatically means you should move on to the next thing. You have real sunk costs in the current thing, and making it better can unlock outsized gains. In this algorithmically-driven world, making something 1% better can increase your payoff 100x.
That of course assumes that with all that extra effort, you’re actually making it better. So when in doubt, move on to the next thing.
Aphorism: “There are few things wherein we can give a sincere judgment, by reason that there are few wherein we have not, in some sort, a private interest.” —Montaigne
Cool:Subtitlecat creates AI-generated subtitles for any show or movie.
The past couple months I’ve set all of my screens to black-and-white: My phone, laptop, tablet, watch, and even the screen in my car.
I haven’t yet looked into the neuroscience behind this, but it feels like it’s triggering far less dopamine than usual. I feel more in-control of my attention. Surprisingly, I’ve noticed I can more easily motivate myself to do simple tasks away from screens, such as clean or wash dishes.
This would make sense because, as Dr. Robert Lustig told us, our dopamine receptors habituate: The more you release, the more you need for a similar effect (until your receptors are shot).
I don’t that often need to temporarily switch the colors back on. I can do basic video and graphics editing just fine in black-and-white, and can quickly check the colors before I finalize.
There’s also a slider to change how strong the black-and-white filter is. I changed the filter for my car’s screen to just under full power, so I can better discern colors on maps.
Every time I switch colors back on, I am shocked how bright they are. It feels similar to tasting the sugar-laden foods all around us after a period without sweets, or exiting a matinee on a sunny day.
In fact, if you search for “dopamine colors,” you’ll see there are lots of articles cheerily guiding designers to use highly-saturated colors to hook users on their interfaces.
If we look at the hues that can be reproduced on a screen, they extend way beyond what can be reproduced with, say, CMYK offset printing.
The only hues in the CMYK color-space that come close to matching the RGB color space (screens) are the pure inks: Cyan, Magenta, and Yellow.
As this diagram shows, we’re actually able to perceive hues well beyond even the RGB color space, especially the greens and blues – you know, the actual natural world.
One thing I’ve noticed after two months in black-and-white is that flowers and birds seem brighter and more beautiful. It’s always a good thing when the real world is more interesting than your screen.
I will never again keep my screens in full color.
Book:Amish Society (Amazon) is about the fascinating community that is intentional about technology.
Cool: This is the only sensible design for a Kindle cover (Amazon) and it’s strangely hard to find.
The first version of the idea that comes to us is the last version we would ever be capable of building.
In The Heart to Start, I called this The Fortress Fallacy. We immediately think of a fortress, despite the fact we don’t even have experience building a cottage.
Dreaming big is good, except when it presents a vision so intimidating you do nothing at all.
I keep a spreadsheet of ideas I’m considering building, and I’ve found a powerful way of evaluating those ideas is what I call the Fortress/Cottage Test.
Two columns are dedicated to different versions of the idea. In the first column, I briefly describe the advanced version of the idea. (This is almost always the form in which the idea first comes to me.) That’s the fortress.
In the second column, I describe the most basic version of the idea I can think of. That’s the cottage.
So your columns might look like this:
🏰 A seven-book fantasy series, set in an underwater world.
🏠 A 2,000-word fantasy short story, set in an underwater world.
🏰 An app that keeps various list components you can mix and match to build packing lists for trips.
🏠 A text file with various copy-and-pasteable components I can mix and match to build packing lists for my trips.
🏰 A YouTube channel featuring tours and reviews of restaurants in Chicago.
🏠 A reel featuring a tour and review of my friend’s restaurant, in Chicago.
I find that thinking of the cottage leads me down a trail of just enough cognitive effort to get me going.
If I stop at the fortress, I’m just looking at the peak of one mountain from the peak of another. Thinking of the cottage takes a little effort, but then concrete and achievable steps stretch out in front of me.
Book:A Night to Remember (Amazon) is a detailed account of the sinking of the Titanic.
Cool:BigMailer helps you send emails for cheap through Amazon SES (and have control over your deliverability!)
If you think of your work as a process of stacking bricks, you have some of the equation figured out.
We tend to dream up castles in the sky, and they’re rarely achieved by carving straight from the side of a mountain. More often, they’re assembled one small work at a time, building into a bigger vision.
The trouble with stacking bricks is it assumes you have a workable plan. If you just keep stacking, it will come tumbling down.
More likely you’re collecting bricks. You stack along the way and put up a little wall here and there, notice it’s getting wobbly, then backtrack and start over.
So don’t just stack the bricks – make the bricks. Through that iterative process you’ll build some strange structures.
But once in a while, through the forces of affinity that hold this universe together, you’ll end up looking like brilliant architect.
Aphorism: “Once we have surrendered our senses and nervous systems to the private manipulation of those who would try to benefit from taking a lease on our eyes and ears and nerves, we don’t really have any rights left.” —Marshall McLuhan
It’s my birthday today and I’m not getting younger. So the thing I experience at the end of every book is stronger than ever.
I was having dinner with a friend also writing a book, and he told me, “If I was in an accident tonight, as I was dying in the ER, I would feel very distraught over not finishing.”
This sounds crazy because you’d expect him to think of his wife and kids. But I understood completely.
The other day, I scheduled a blog post to go out a few months from now. It shares my entire unrevised manuscript.
I don’t plan on dying. But if I do, this post will go live and the world will at least have my book. (If all goes well, hopefully I won’t forget to un-schedule it.)
Scheduling that post has brought me an inordinate amount of inner peace. Because the same desire for significance that motivates us to embark on work that matters makes the final stretch of any masterpiece the most harrowing: You’re in the odd position of feeling you’ve done your life’s work, while also wanting to live long enough to see how it goes.
So the closer you get to the finish, the more you stand to lose.
Yes, it’s supposed to feel that heavy.
Aphorism: “To lament that we shall not be alive a hundred years hence, is the same folly as to be sorry we were not alive a hundred years ago.” —Montaigne
Cool: Someone will get rich hacking together an AI-camera and water jets to make a consumer-grade Squirrel soaker 9000