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This post is a result of a couple of tweaks I've made to my environment and habits that have seen my productivity increase and an improvement in my mental wellbeing. I want to continue to explore this, which is where this thread comes in.
It is still early days, but I plan to document what I try, and my results in productivity and wellbeing.
The first thing I'm going to do is look at my environment and how it impacts me. Small changes to my environment, can cause big changes to my productivity. If 5 minutes of cleaning my desk at the end of the week means the quality of my work is higher throughout the day, then it is a good ROI.
Throughout this thread, I'm going to use the analogy of the rider, elephant, and the path. For those who don't know what I'm talking about here is a cheery little video:
(I recommend the book mentioned too)
For those that prefer to read than watch a video, Quora has a good explanation:
https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-rider-and-the-elephant-metaphor
Actions Taken Already
Over the last week, I've taken a number of actions that have already seen results.
Completely removed coffee from my house.
This is a good example of creating a solid 'path' to make sure the new habit sticks. Instead of just trying to resist coffee, I just threw all coffee in the house out. I knew Concept at 2pm in the afternoon, probably cranky from no coffee would have little to no willpower to resist "just having a little to get through the afternoon". So bye bye coffee. After 3 days of withdrawals, I felt mentally better and didn't get sleepy around the 3pm mark. Just felt happier in general without relying on caffeine.
Started taking creatine again.
This was after seeing this video by Tim Ferris
I already took creatine when I was training for a Brazillian Jui Jitsu competitions, and would notice a spike in focus. Didn't put two and two together until this video. Over the last week, I've taken 5g each morning with CoQ10 (cheaper than ubiquinol mentioned in the video). Already seeing some improvement in my state of mind but will continue to monitor over the next couple of weeks. My performance at BJJ training has improved as well. Also, once I have a little more cash flow, I wouldn't mind trying some of the teas mentioned
Removed life clutter.
There were things around the house that I would either distract me or remind me of shit not done. This would clutter my mind, and it would take will power for me to either not get distracted or reminded of something that would dampen my mood. This was easy. I spent an hour or two on Saturday either removing these completely, cleaning, or just doing that simple thing I had been procrastinating over.
Website blocker.
This one is self-explanatory. Instead of trying to use willpower to stop myself from going onto sites that weren't immediately productive, I've just blocked them using Stayfocusd. I also noticed that sites I also blocked on my computer I was starting to access on my phone during work hours. As a result, I have also added a website blocker to my phone.
Actions moving forward.
Recording Performance
Over the next couple of weeks, I will be recording my performance. I have already set up email reminders that send me an email at 8am (when I started working) and 3pm (my biggest procrastination time) to check in. I will quickly reply to these emails with a quick check in with how I'm feeling, my productivity and what environmental factors have helped or hindered. Writing these emails should take less than a minute or two, however at the end of the week I look at small things I can change that will have a big impact.
Look at current mental models
I'm sure there is something unhelpful bouncing away in the background there. I will read Ryuzaki's thread https://www.buildersociety.com/threads/psychological-barriers-to-success.944/ and then create a list of actions to take to shift unproductive mental models.
Making changes
I have a number of things I plan to do to change my environment to further facilitate productive actions and mental wellbeing. Some are bigger than others (eg selling old car, and some old furniture stored near I work) so I will be creating a game plan to change those things over time. I will also update this thread as a way to keep me on track, impose some sort of mental accountability, record results, and hopefully provide you guys some value
It is still early days, but I plan to document what I try, and my results in productivity and wellbeing.
The first thing I'm going to do is look at my environment and how it impacts me. Small changes to my environment, can cause big changes to my productivity. If 5 minutes of cleaning my desk at the end of the week means the quality of my work is higher throughout the day, then it is a good ROI.
Throughout this thread, I'm going to use the analogy of the rider, elephant, and the path. For those who don't know what I'm talking about here is a cheery little video:
For those that prefer to read than watch a video, Quora has a good explanation:
https://www.quora.com/What-is-the-rider-and-the-elephant-metaphor
Actions Taken Already
Over the last week, I've taken a number of actions that have already seen results.
Completely removed coffee from my house.
This is a good example of creating a solid 'path' to make sure the new habit sticks. Instead of just trying to resist coffee, I just threw all coffee in the house out. I knew Concept at 2pm in the afternoon, probably cranky from no coffee would have little to no willpower to resist "just having a little to get through the afternoon". So bye bye coffee. After 3 days of withdrawals, I felt mentally better and didn't get sleepy around the 3pm mark. Just felt happier in general without relying on caffeine.
Started taking creatine again.
This was after seeing this video by Tim Ferris
Removed life clutter.
There were things around the house that I would either distract me or remind me of shit not done. This would clutter my mind, and it would take will power for me to either not get distracted or reminded of something that would dampen my mood. This was easy. I spent an hour or two on Saturday either removing these completely, cleaning, or just doing that simple thing I had been procrastinating over.
Website blocker.
This one is self-explanatory. Instead of trying to use willpower to stop myself from going onto sites that weren't immediately productive, I've just blocked them using Stayfocusd. I also noticed that sites I also blocked on my computer I was starting to access on my phone during work hours. As a result, I have also added a website blocker to my phone.
Actions moving forward.
Recording Performance
Over the next couple of weeks, I will be recording my performance. I have already set up email reminders that send me an email at 8am (when I started working) and 3pm (my biggest procrastination time) to check in. I will quickly reply to these emails with a quick check in with how I'm feeling, my productivity and what environmental factors have helped or hindered. Writing these emails should take less than a minute or two, however at the end of the week I look at small things I can change that will have a big impact.
Look at current mental models
I'm sure there is something unhelpful bouncing away in the background there. I will read Ryuzaki's thread https://www.buildersociety.com/threads/psychological-barriers-to-success.944/ and then create a list of actions to take to shift unproductive mental models.
Making changes
I have a number of things I plan to do to change my environment to further facilitate productive actions and mental wellbeing. Some are bigger than others (eg selling old car, and some old furniture stored near I work) so I will be creating a game plan to change those things over time. I will also update this thread as a way to keep me on track, impose some sort of mental accountability, record results, and hopefully provide you guys some value