michael-dean-k/

Topic

discipline

2 pieces

Beyond hustle and vibes

· 247 words

It's a mistake to think of effort as a single spectrum between a Gary Vaynerchuk grind-till-you-die flip-slop-on-Facebook-marketplace vibe and a Wu-Wei, non-effort, sabbatical-brained, Netflix-and-chill vibe. Something not on that spectrum is obsession. It's not work for work's sake, or work for status climbing, but work by seduction, by tinkering, by vision, by purpose or duty or whatever. It often can look like grind work in terms of focus and intensity and prolificness and hours spent, but it feels different because it comes from a different place.

I framed this question to my cousins: would you rather work hard for 8+ hours a day on something you feel compelled and intrinsically motivated towards, or, go into an office for 8 hours a day for a bullshit job that only requires 1-2 hours of simple work, mindless and purposeless work, and then spend the rest of the time socializing?

The word "work" itself is a bit tainted, because there's a sense of obligation ("I have to do this to get paid"), sacrifice ("I'm doing this at the expense of things I love to support us"), and utility ("I'm making things that are functional for other people"). The work that I'm most drawn to is something like the inverse of this. It's pleasurable ("I lose track of time doing this"), primary ("There's nothing else I'd rather do"), and visionary ("I'm doing this because I see the value in it, and even if others can't see it now, they may eventually.")

Streaks over deadlines

· 234 words

A big shift in my way of working: instead of trying to scope a specific and ambitious batch of tasks I think should be done in a given day or week, all I commit to is time towards specific areas. The deadlines are less important (generally) than making sure I show up and do high-leverage work with 100% embodiment and enthusiasm. I just set up the Streaks app, and aim for 2.5 hours of work per day over 6 areas: writing, coding, reading, outreach, business, and culture. Each is a simple target: 20-45 minutes per day. At the very least, it gets me started. If I’m in a flow, I go over as long as I want (1-2 hours or more). If not, I just stop. The goal here is to rethink what work might look like while caring for my daughter (and my post-labor wife). I could potentially knock out 2.5 hours in a single nap cycle, or maybe it’s spread over 3-4 sessions at random times. It forces me to prioritize an important thing per day in an area that is an infinite game. It feels slightly unambitious, but I actually think an OS of this nature might be something I continue even when I “get my time back.” There’s a forced prioritization, as well as open space to either (a) diverge/explore, or (b) drill deep on things that actually matter.