Deep Questions with Cal Newport - Ep. 291: Do Better, Do Less
Episode Date: March 11, 2024What does the story of the rise of the singing superstar Jewel teach us about escaping busyness in our knowledge work jobs? In this episode, Cal makes the connection, extracting a key lesson about qua...lity as an engine for slowness, and then providing concrete advice and examples for applying this lesson to your own professional life. Also: listener questions and the books Cal read in February.Below are the questions covered in today's episode (with their timestamps). Get your questions answered by Cal! Here’s the link: bit.ly/3U3sTvoVideo from today’s episode: youtube.com/calnewportmediaDeep Dive: Doing Better, Do Less [5:00]- Is my job too hard? [38:25]- How do I sell myself better? [42:52] - How do I convince myself to do actual hard work? [45:42]- How do I find time to get better if I'm busy? [48:46]- What is the values plan? [53:23]The 5 books Cal read in February 2024 [1:01:45]The Sabbath (AJ Heschel)Making Movies (Sidney Lumet)Killer of the Flower Moon (David Grann)Orthodoxy (G.K. Chesterton)The Good Shepherd (CA Forestor)Links:FREE download excerpt and 2 Bonuses for “Slow Productivity”: calnewport.com/slow Thanks to our Sponsors: shopify.com/deepdrinklmnt.com/deepmybodytutor.comblinkist.com/deepThanks to Jesse Miller for production, Jay Kerstens for the intro music, Kieron Rees for slow productivity music, and Mark Miles for mastering. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I'm Cal Newport, and this is Deep Questions, the show about cultivating a deep life in a high-tech world.
So I am here once again after two weeks of touring for my new book, Slow Productivity, in the Deep Work HQ.
They say distance makes the heart grow fonder.
That was definitely the case when it comes to the Deep Work HQ.
I had been all over Los Angeles and Austin recording podcasts about slow productivity.
So I've been in every different type of studio you could imagine podcasting.
I got to tell you my favorite of them all right here, my HQ here in Tacoma Park, Maryland.
There's no Jesse today.
I just got back from my trip.
I'm recording this at the last minute to get this episode out on time.
So there wasn't time to actually set up a normal recording session.
just ran over to the HQ to solo cast this episode. And I really got to say I am happy to be here.
We got a good show and I have a deep dive that's going to really focus in on one of the more
interesting ideas and stories from my book. We've got a good collection of relevant questions
from you, my listeners to go through. And during the final segment, we'll switch gears.
And I'll do the books I read in February 2024.
Right. A couple quick updates on the books, slow productivity. First of all, if you
want to see me in person, March 16th. I think that's Saturday, March 16th at 3 p.m.
I will be at politics and pros on Connecticut Avenue in Washington, D.C. My friend Dave Epstein,
New York Times bestselling author, Dave Epstein is going to join me on stage to have a conversation
about deep work, I mean slow productivity rather, then I'll answer your questions and I'll sign books.
So go to the politics and pros websites to get that detail and make sure that I actually have
that date right. But it is Saturday at 3 p.m. at Politics and Prose in Washington, D.C.
It's going to be there. Some other people will be there. Should be a lot of fun. Look, if you want
to hear me talk about this book, it's all I've been doing for the last two weeks. There's no
shortage of articles and interviews you can find to hear me talking about this book. Just last week,
for example, I'm not going to get them all, but just to list some of the podcast I appeared on last
week. I went on Rich Rolls podcast that released, Adam Grant's podcast, Brett McKay's The Art of Manliness,
that released last week as well. Oh man, I'm going to forget, I'm going to forget a ton of
these Brian Keating's podcast. That was a lot of fun, among many. So check that out. The day this
episode comes out, I believe my episode with Andrew Huberman should be launching. So I went out
went out to meet with Huberman.
We did a long interview.
It was a lot of fun.
So that should be available by now, too, if I understood the timing correctly of that episode.
And many other podcasts, Orion Holiday's podcast.
I think that came out.
Part two, Orion Holiday's interview with me is coming out this week.
Chris Williamson's podcast.
I think that's coming out soon.
I don't know if that's come out yet or not.
There's a bunch, a bunch of good podcasts coming out.
Many, many more to follow.
If you want to hear me writing about this, there's the,
The New York Times op-ed I published a couple weeks ago.
I mentioned that on the show already, but you can find out it's an op-ed about seasonality.
Then when I was away on the trip, on February 29th, I published an article in the Atlantic, where I argued that hybrid work is not enough.
But we really need is hybrid attention, a hybrid schedule in which the at-home days, no meetings, no email.
That one got some attention.
That's an interesting one.
So check that out.
Also, I published on publication day last week a really cool essay in the New Yorker, a personal essay called How I Learned to Concentrate.
And it goes back and talks about something I haven't gotten to detail before, but my time joining the theory group at MIT, what it was like earning my doctor at MIT.
And it was just really preposterous and fascinating and wondrous place.
And I basically make the argument in this essay.
A lot of the ideas I've explored in my writing ever since.
and particularly the ideas that come together in my new book, Slow Productivity, all have their
origins and this defining experience of my young 20. So it's a rare personal essay type of article
for me. I really enjoyed it. So look for that, how I learned to concentrate. That was March 5th in the New Yorker.
All right. That's enough about me talking about me talking about my book. Let's move on
today's deep dive.
Today I want to tell you the story of the singer, Jewel, and how she became famous.
Not because this story is fascinating, though it is, but because it highlights a key principle
from my book, Slow Productivity, about how to move your professional life away from
busyness and toward producing results that matter.
So what I'm going to do is I'm going to tell Jewel's story and then I'm going to draw
concrete lessons from her story that you can apply in your specific.
job. I'll give you specific examples about how you might put these lessons in the practice.
I'll end with a couple of common pitfalls that afflict a lot of people who attempt to escape
busyness and fail to do so. All right. So let's start with Jewel. Jewel has an interesting
origin story. I went deep on this when researching slow productivity just because I found it
fascinating. She grew up in rural Alaska, Homer Alaska, to be more precise. And she was
part of a family that were traveling musicians.
She was part of a family traveling musician troupe.
They have Swiss heritage, so she learned how to yodel at an early age, which actually
gave her really interesting vocal control, which she really leveraged, I think, later on
in her style.
At some point, her mom leaves the family, so it's just her and her dad and her brother,
and they're touring, and they're touring some pretty rough places.
These are not the Von Tropp family singers.
We're talking biker bars.
We're talking rural interior.
or Alaska doing shows.
We're talking not so great hotels, right?
So she sort of had this rough upbringing.
There's a part in her story
where she's living in Homer, Alaska,
and commuting to her job in town.
She lived in a cabin, you know,
by a lake somewhere.
She commuted to her job in town on a horse.
She didn't have her driver's license
and a horse was an easier way
to get over the rough terrain, right?
So this is Jewel,
this prodigious singer in this really
unusual rough child.
So in the town of Homer, she comes across someone who is visiting from the Interlocking Academy.
This is a really well-known arts academy in Michigan.
And he recognizes her talent.
It says, look, we have scholarships.
Like, you should come formally study how to sing at this arts academy.
I'll show you how to do it.
I'll record your audition tape and I'll walk you through the application process.
This was all foreign to Jewel.
He walks her through and she gets accepted.
They raise money in the town.
That don't be money.
She has to raise money just to get the plane tickets to get to Michigan to go.
It's a beautiful academy.
It's spread out over this big acreage.
You sort of walk through the woods between buildings, a beautiful place.
She shows up there, fish out of water.
It's an understatement.
Almost immediately, the dean calls her into his office and says,
Jewel, you can't walk around with a hunting knife strapped to your leg.
See, the Jewel from rural Alaska, of course you're going to have a knife with you.
It's very useful.
You wouldn't be anywhere without your knife.
And he had to sort of kindly tell her, all right, here in suburban Michigan, you don't
walk around with a large knife strap to your leg.
Anyways, she gets formal training.
She becomes a better singer.
She becomes more exposed to music.
She can't afford to go home during the breaks.
So she begins hitchhiking.
doing these long trips during the breaks with her guitar, and she begins songwriting.
She begins to write some of her best-known songs from her initial debut album that will come much later, right?
So we have this, like, interesting story.
She makes her way to San Diego.
Her mom's there.
They're living together for a while.
They lose the house.
She moves into her car.
She's not doing great, but she has this prodigious talent.
It's rough, but this prodigious talent in singing, living out of her car in San Diego.
She comes across a coffee house, the interchange coffee house.
That coffee house is sort of struggling.
She talks to the owner, Nancy, and says, look, let me make you a deal.
I'm going to perform here, just here, me and my guitar, and just give me a cut of the proceeds.
You know, I think that could help me out, and I think you could help your store actually grow.
So Jewel forms what's like essentially a residency at this small coffee house.
And she just goes to promote her shows.
she busks on the San Diego
beach front. When people come up to hear
a player to put a dollar in her guitar case,
she says, hey, come to my show. The first show,
her memory is somewhere between two to
four people showed up. Two to four
surfers she met who thought she was cute
on the beach and they showed up. That was it.
But she played her heart out.
Right? Because she had all this pain.
I mean, I talk about this in slow
productivity that, like, Jewel is defined
by these intertwined forces
of talent and pain.
She can, she can,
she can sing, but there's a real heart to it.
So she begins doing these epic performances that are like hours long.
It's a lot of original songs, some covers.
She's really burying her soul.
They're like, they're emotional, you know.
People are crying.
So the word gets out like, what's going on?
There's something special.
It's rough, but there's something special going on here.
She recalls there being basically exponential growth.
There's two people, then four people, then eight people, then 16 people.
After a few months, people are spilling out onto the sidewalk outside of the interchange
coffee house.
They have to put up speakers outside just so you can hear the show if you can actually get in.
Word gets out to the record executives.
They start showing up.
Like, okay, there's something special here.
They began flying her to meetings.
Like, okay, we want to talk to you about signing with us because, like, clearly you have talent and we don't want you to go to another record label.
Finally, a record executive sits her down.
This is where we're going to start to intersect with slow productivity here.
sits her down and says,
okay,
I'm giving you,
I'm putting this on the table right now,
million dollar signing bonus.
Remember,
this is the 90s,
early 90s,
million dollars is a lot of money.
Still,
us today,
but even then a lot of money.
She's living,
Jules living in her car.
Million dollars on the table.
She's like,
all right,
let me go think about this.
She's a,
she's a fighter.
She's incredibly self-reliant,
right?
She's like,
hold on.
Let me think about this.
She goes to the library
and gets out a book
from the library
about how,
to succeed, not even how to succeed.
I think it was just how the music industry works.
And with the help of the fact checker with my book, we tracked down the actual title of the
book.
She got it wrong in the interviews, but we found the real book she was talking about.
And it's like a guidebook to the music industry.
And she looks into this and she says, okay, how do these signing bonuses work?
Oh, they're in advance.
They're in advance on the royalties you're going to make.
So they give you a million dollars up front.
The first million dollars you make goes to paying that back.
and then after you pay it back, you get to keep any royalties beyond there.
It's a standard advance set up.
It's how books work as well, by the way.
You get an advance on royalties, and only after you pay back your advance,
do you actually earn any further royalties?
She looks this up, she thinks about it.
She goes back to the record executive, and she says, no, thank you.
She turns down a million dollars.
She's living in her car.
She turns down a million dollars.
So what's going on here?
Well, Jewel, we really have to give her credit for this.
She recognized that she had real talent, but also she was rough.
Her only performance experience as a solo singer songwriter, not as playing yodeling with her family or whatever,
but as a solo singer songwriter, her only experience was really playing in the Interchange Coffee House and a few other shows that she had done with friends.
And she knew if she'd accepted a million dollar signing bonus, the record label is going to say, we have to go all in right away.
We need that money back.
Let's throw you out there and see if you can become a superstar right away and make back to money.
And if you don't, I'm sorry, you're gone.
And that would have been her chance.
And she thought, I'm not ready for that yet.
I need to learn how to get better at this, how to harness my craft.
And so, and her logic was absolutely right.
If I don't cost the record label a lot of money, they won't care enough to kick me off the label.
if, you know, I'm not doing something right off the bat.
They will let me stay as a sign musician performing and, you know, recording as long as I don't cost them a lot of money.
And I need that time.
She had a phrase she had learned from her grandmother, hardwood grows slowly.
She needed that time.
She realized if she was going to be a real star, she needed time to get there.
So she said, no million dollars.
And then, oh, she's so clever.
such a shrewd, there's such a shrewd sort of practicality in Jewel.
She says, you know, but what we can do because I know you feel, you know, they felt bad.
She's turning down a million dollars.
She said, well, why don't we just make my back end higher?
So if I do make a lot, if I do sell a lot of records, I'm going to make more money, right?
And they're thinking like, oh, look, she's probably not going to happen.
This is great.
She's so cheap.
So she gets a bigger back in the normal, which is going to pay her back handsomely in the future.
Anyway, so now she's signed.
Now she's signed, small advance, big back in, and she has to go record this album.
And she was absolutely right.
She wasn't ready to be a star, right?
So she's thinking, and I love the details of this, right?
Because it reminds me of what it's like and the complexities of ambition and actually living up to ambition.
My whole life is sort of defined by this at a much smaller scale, the sort of ambition and the failures to fully reach that ambition and the glimpses of real success that are followed by the frustrations.
So she wants to do something special and she turns down.
They're giving her all these producers.
The record labels like, here's a hot shot pop producer.
Here's another hot shot pop producer.
That's not what I want to do.
Here's what I want to do.
Neil Young's producer, whoever produced Harvest, I love that sound.
That's what I want to do.
They're like, okay, I mean, this is weird.
You know, there's like the 90s.
There's like Lisa Loeb, you know, okay.
Like pop punk is coming out of the grunge air at this point.
Like you want to do like Neil Young.
Okay.
They're like, okay, whatever.
It's not costing us much money, whatever you want to do.
And she goes actually out to Neil Young's ranch, records her album with the stray Gators,
with Neil Young's band in Northern California and his ranch with his producer.
And they record her first album.
It's not great because the problem is, and she was right, she was nervous.
Like all of her performance experience was her alone in a coffee shop.
And now she's playing with the stray Gators with Neil Young's backing band.
She's nervous about this.
And it shows it's tentative, right?
I mean, it's like, okay, the songs are okay.
She had a good collection of songs from, you know, traveling and hitchhiking while she was at interlocking, but it was nervous.
They weren't great.
The album comes out and not much happens.
This thing is not selling.
If she had done the million dollar signing bonus, this is where they would have been like, you're out of here.
In fact, they wouldn't even let her have this experimentation.
They would have made her done probably a real poppy type of, you know, a real poppy type of, you know, a real poppy type of, you know,
album like let's get right after it it wouldn't have worked but she didn't cost him any money
so like oh we're not going to drop you want you want you go i guess you can tour and she's like i'm
going to tour really cheap no van no bus a car and i'll just drive along myself and tour really cheap and
in fact for a while she was even performing with a group called earth jam that would perform
and i'm not kidding you here environmentally themed concerts for high schools during
today in exchange for them giving her transportation to her gigs at night, right?
I mean, so she was costing people nothing, performing, getting experience.
She started a lot of college shows, a lot of live performances on college radio, playing at
colleges.
And then really there, that vibe is where she began to pick up her confidence.
She did this.
It was like a year of this going on.
Finally getting the training she needs to figure out, how do I do this, how do I perform?
How do I be more of a star and not just a coffee shop?
Kruner. And then she goes back and says, okay, let me re-record what I think could be a really
big song. You were meant for me. I was nervous. I was reporting this with the straight gaiters.
I feel better now. She goes back and re-recorded it. She has her friend from California flee,
the bassist from the Red Hot Chili Peppers, plays on that new re-recording. Now this one's working.
It's more confidence, more sultry. Finally, things start to happen. She begins with all of her
college touring to show up on the college charts.
From there,
Who Will Save Your Soul starts to kind of make a move?
It's kind of peeking up on people are listening to it here and there.
Then she records this great video for her newly re-recorded version of You were meant for
me.
And that just explodes on MTV.
And she's ready for it now.
We're like a year and a half out from her turning down a million dollars.
She's ready for it now.
And that album, pieces of you, just explodes.
And remember, she's getting extra back in.
So the money is flying out.
her.
Anyway, so that's what happens with Jewel.
So what's the lesson here?
Well, there's a principle in slow productivity that is titled Obsess over Quality.
And Jewel's story gets to why this is important.
See, when you obsess over quality, I want to do something really well.
escaping busyness and moving towards something more slow and sustainable
becomes inevitable. It becomes natural. It becomes what's attractive to you.
When you're not obsessed over doing something really well, there's an appeal to the busy and the frenetic.
Because it's something to do. You feel like I'm making moves. I'm jumping on calls. I have all these plans. I'm on Slack channels, telling everyone things.
I'm putting up videos of this over on TikTok.
There is a warmth from the heat generated by the friction of freneticism.
But that warmth doesn't turn into real fires.
It's not hot enough.
But on the other hand, we say, no, no, I want to do something really well.
I want to produce an amjewel.
I want to produce an album that's going to explode.
I have to slow down because I need to get better.
I need to get really good.
So I'm going to get a small record deal to have the record label,
leave me alone so I can just spend a year and a half touring and finding my
finding my voice, getting advice, going back, re-recording, tinkering.
She's a couple other versions of you were meant for me, by the way, including a real popy
version with a pop producer that was no good.
I've heard it.
It's no good.
She needed time.
She had to slow down.
So, like, when we try to parableize this to our lives, not as singers, but it's just knowledge
workers doing whatever we do, accepting the million dollars.
like the busyness, just like running around and doing everything.
Turning down the million dollars and taking your time to figure out how to be a performer,
that's slowing down.
So that's the first lesson from Jules' story.
Once you begin prioritizing doing something really well,
the only thing that feels natural then is being less busy.
The focus of quality is the antithesis, antithesis, well, man, I've been traveling too long,
antithesis of freneticism.
right but there's a second lesson in here as well so if we return to jewel what happens well
that album pieces of you is just crazy she makes a lot of money how do we know she makes a lot of
money we know because uh for an unfortunate reason there's this unfortunate side note to jule's story
that her mom comes back into her life and basically takes over as her manager this is like a
you know we've we've heard this story before this is the colonel and elvis like look there's
nothing here that's that unusual.
Anyways, she steals a lot of Jules money.
She steals a lot of her money.
Eventually, there's a lawsuit Jules or mom.
The only reason why that's relevant to us is in that lawsuit and amounts is named.
So we get a sense of how successful Jule was with these initial albums.
The specific number she cited that her mom stole from her was $200 million.
So if it's possible for someone to steal $200 million for you, you're probably doing from a
financial perspective, and again, I'm not an expert on this, but I would say pretty well.
Okay, so she's getting very successful.
There's this whole mechanism now that surrounds her, right?
The better you get at doing something you love, the more the world conspires to try to
prevent you from doing that thing.
That's an axiom that all creatives know.
This happens to Jewel.
They send her on an international tour, exhausting, right?
A Taylor Swift type thing, right?
She comes back from the tour, and now her 18.
agents are saying, okay, you're young, right?
You're young and attractive.
You need to do movies, too, to move to Hollywood,
the get her in the devil's backbone and Engley movie.
Like, here's the plan.
Move to L.A.
We're going to do international tour movies.
International tour movies.
You're going to be a multimedia mogul star.
And Jules says, well, wait a second.
What do I want to do?
I want to produce great music.
I don't worry about money.
I have plenty of money.
I want to produce great music.
No, thank you.
Never does it.
international tour again, leaves to movie business, does not settle in L.A., goes to a
ranch in Texas with her boyfriend, who was a rodeo writer, and just writes music.
So there's another lesson in there. And again, I'm trying to parableize this and the lessons
are going to be relevant to us who are not really fancy and successful movie stars.
The lesson here is that by getting really good at something, Jule was able to gain autonomy
over what her work was like.
So getting good at something enables slowness.
So as you quest to get good, lesson number one, you crave slowness.
As you get better at things, lesson number two, you gain the autonomy to actually enforce
more slowness in your life.
Jule is a very successful musician so she could basically say, no, I don't want to do this other
stuff.
I just want to write music.
I have enough money.
I have enough FU money to say, no, I'm going to shape what my life is like, and I want
to be slow.
So we've got these great two lessons in here.
Quality makes slowness something that is necessary and appealing.
The pursuit of quality also eventually makes slowness something that you can more
easily enforce or maintain in your life.
So we have a virtuous flywheel here.
It's why I call this last principle obsess over quality, the glue that holds all the other
principles of slow productivity together because it makes the other ideas possible.
The other ideas are about doing fewer things and more.
working a more natural pace, the obsession over quality really makes that much more possible.
All right, so let's try to apply this to a normal knowledge work job.
What is the template we want to apply if you're a marketing director or a programmer and not a music superstar?
Well, think about it this way.
One, figure out what you do best or what you could do that's going to be the most valuable for your sector or
organization. We often skip over this step, but it's really hard sometimes to figure out what
really matters. What is our equivalent of Jules' performance singing ability? It's not always
obvious in non-creep specifically creative career, so we have to go find it. And then once we find
up, we have to create our equivalent of Jules' training regime. She spent a year and a half on the
road figuring out how do I perform, how do I find my voice, what is my voice, how do I translate what I
was doing in the interchange coffee house and there's something that translates to a CD that's
going to MTV, I'm going to work on that craft.
Well, you have to have a similar training regime where you haven't just identified, here's
what matters in my job, but you know how you're getting after that, how you're improving that.
And then three, as you get more successful, cash that in to gain more autonomy over your work
so that you can have whatever level or definition of slowness appeals to you.
So you can step away from busyness and keep your work crafted around the things that really
resonate. That's hard as well. That's hard as well because, well, as you get better, people aren't
going to be offering you to do less. So you're going to have to actually make that call yourself.
So let's get some concrete examples here. Let's go back to I mentioned marketing director.
What might this dual strategy look like, obsessing over quality look like if you're a marketing
director. Well, maybe what you realize is, okay, when you get measurement-based, you can really
get fine-tuned about figuring out what marketing efforts work and what don't, how to lean in heavily
on the things that work and away from the things that don't. And so maybe you decide, I'm going to
become ruthlessly measurement-based in designing of my marketing strategies, even if this is kind of
scary, because I'm not just doing, here's a standard mix of things. You can't really get mad at me.
I'm doing sort of the right things. Like, no, I'm ruthlessly.
measurement-based. I'm learning these measurement tools. I'm trusting the data. I'm pushing the
things that are working well beyond what is normal. And maybe as a result, by doing this,
your campaigns are unusual and innovative and very successful. You figured out what's important,
my campaign's working, and a training regime for getting there. I'm going to do this sort of leaning
into evidence-based in this example. Now you have to use that success to gain autonomy. So now imagine
you say, okay, I'm really desirable in this sector.
I'm leaving my company to go freelance.
You can hire me to be a marketing, to run the marketing for your particular,
whatever it is, product or launch or whatever.
And I'm going to charge a good amount of money because I'm really good at this.
I can back it up.
And I'm going to do this eight months a year.
Four months a year, I don't take contracts.
That's just the deal.
If your contract overlaps those four months, I just can't do it.
Imagine that now.
Now you've created this really nice.
sort of slow rhythm where you're doing great work.
You have four months a year you're not working at all.
I mean, you can just imagine in this daydream here how you've escaped just being like a lower
level marketing director that they don't really trust.
They're bothering you with emails and you're working all the time and you're always worried
about your job.
All right, what about if you're a programmer?
Let's give another concrete example here.
Maybe you really look around and say, oh, this particular specialty is incredibly
valuable right now.
right maybe it's like API development for platforms or maybe it's something in the the AI space like you're very comfortable working with the the ML libraries for Google you know I'm very comfortable working with doing efficient training code for you know neural nets or something like that you figure out like this is the thing that's really valuable we can we don't have a good person for this these people are really desirable and he's
work an hour a day. Like you train yourself. You do sample, you read and do sample projects.
You know, you're just doing this, forcing yourself to get better and better and better at this.
And as you get better and better, you eventually be considered a 10x programmer. Your salary jumps up.
Maybe you begin to dictate more the terms of how your work happens. I do one project at a time. I take
sabbaticals every three years. They're just happy to have you because they don't want the other team to have you.
Completely different, less busy life. You can dictate to terms.
There's just some concrete examples of what I'm trying to show you here is that this dual strategy of figuring out what matters,
systematically pursuing it, leveraging success to gain autonomy and to move away from busyness and towards something more meaningful,
really can apply to many different jobs.
All right, so what are the pitfalls here that you want to avoid?
I have three real quick I want to mention.
This first one actually came up in my conversation with Ryan Holliday when I did his podcast recently to talk about slow productivity,
because there's actually an idea of his that we sort of rift on.
This was this idea of you want to make sure that you're not playing the wrong game.
It's one of the biggest pitfalls is like, look, I want to do really well, but you're doing well at the wrong game.
And the example he gave, which I think is a good one, is focusing on pleasing over impressing.
And so, okay, here's what I want to do is I'm going to be super responsive.
Like, I make everyone else this life easier.
You need something.
I'll do it, even if I have to start.
stay up late. I'll answer your emails right away.
Like my job is to reduce stress in everybody else's life.
And people will love you for that.
But they won't respect you for that.
You're not going to gain yourself autonomy or leverage doing that.
You're going to gain yourself a lot more work.
Now, consider the other game to play, which is I want to impress all these people.
It's not impressive to be super responsive and to like do what it takes to get these small
things done.
It's not impressive.
It's useful to them.
Impressive is I can program.
these transformer, you know, matrix manipulations for this AI, I think, better than anyone else you know.
And it gives us a 10x speed up in the training when I do it when I'm on the team.
And I'm like fine with email.
I'm kind of, you know, I'm not like a jerk about it, but I'm not like great at the small things you give me.
But I can do this really well.
And that's really impressive.
That is much more valuable.
Playing the game of being impressive instead of playing the game of pleasing people.
Pitfall number two has to do with the training.
aspect, right? So these pitfalls, by the way, correspond to the three, three-part lessons. So if the
first part was figure out what you do best, playing to wrong game is a pitfall about getting
that wrong. The second part of our three-step system was create a training regime. So the
pitfall here is what I call going on fun runs instead of interval training. Right. So like when people
want to become a better runner, they're amateur runners, they want to just like go for
5K runs and blast music and kind of like go fast at the end. And,
work up a sweat, but never really do anything that hard, right?
Whereas like serious runners, like, no, no, no, I'm either doing 10-mile runs to build up my
aerobic base or I'm doing vomit-inducing intervals to get my speed up.
It's not fun, right?
The professional runners are doing the stuff you really need to do to get better.
The amateur runners are doing the stuff that they want to do, so they kind of tell the story
that that's what's important.
Same thing happens with knowledge, work professional skills all the time.
We write a story about what we want to do because we like the idea of, I can spend 30
minutes doing this U-Demee course on programming every day.
I can find time for it.
It's not too hard, but it makes me feel productive.
We write stories about what we want to be important instead of figuring out the things
that actually matter.
And almost always the things that actually matter aren't fun.
You have to learn to actually get the pleasure out of doing the hard thing other people
won't do.
Athletes know this.
You have to alchemize intense discomfort of certain training.
I can't understand this math, but I'm going to crack it.
Alchemize that into fulfillment.
Yeah, other people are going to give up.
I'm not.
I'm not going to give up here.
All right.
The third pitfall here, when it comes to using success to gain more autonomy,
the pitfall here is what I call the control trap.
This was in my book, so good they can't ignore you.
The control trap.
The control trap basically says,
as you get good enough to gain control over your career
and the potentially use this to gain more autonomy,
to gain more slowness,
that is exactly the time where you're going to be presented,
with all of these really flattering opportunities to get paid more and get more,
whatever, respect, I guess, like more clout in your field in exchange for having a
busier, more frenetic job.
Like, as soon as you get good enough to be able to demand slowness, people will start
offering you fastness on the most appealing platters you've seen.
Hey, good news.
You could be a managing partner at our law firm.
Like, oh, man, that's hard.
And that, you know, that pays a lot of money.
Yeah, that's definitely what I want to do.
do. By the way, it's twice to work.
You know, so as you get really good at something, people don't come to you and say,
hey, you're really good. Do you want to, like, chill?
Like, we'll pay you the same amount of money and you can work half the time if you want.
They don't say that.
They say, how about we double the money and double the amount of work you do?
That's the control trap.
So you're going to have to fight against the grain.
No one is going to hold your hand applying your hard one leverage in the market to try to make
your life slower.
No one wants you to be slower.
You have to be the one to demand it and have faith in yourself.
All right, so this is the pitfalls.
All right, so anyways, there we go.
That's the story of Jewel.
I think it's a really cool story.
I tell it in detail and slow productivity, but those are the lessons to pull from it.
Obsessing over quality makes slowness seem absolutely necessary.
Obsessing over quality eventually gives you more options than you thought you ever had
to actually put slowness into pursuit.
So quality and slowness are intertwined.
if you want to escape overload and crushing busyness, paradoxically,
focusing on what matters and sometimes working harder on what matters is going to make your life easier.
All right, so we have some great questions to get to.
First, however, I want to talk about one of the sponsors that makes this show possible,
and that is our good friends at Shopify,
the global commerce platform that helps you sell at every stage of your business
from the launch your online shop stage to the first real-life store stage,
all the way to the, did we just hit a million dollars in order stage?
Shopify is there to help you grow.
You have an all-in-one e-commerce platform.
You have an in-person point-of-sale system.
Whatever you're selling, they've got you covered.
Look, if you're doing e-commerce,
Shopify has one of the best converting checkout packages on the internet,
at 36% better on average in converting people into buyers compared to other leading e-commerce
platforms.
But Jesse and I always talk about, you know, we should start a store at some point, a deep question
store.
And then we have terrible idea for merchandise, by which I mean brilliant ideas.
For merchandise, my best idea, of course, being the shirt that has the VBLCCP,
BBLCBP, Logan, right across the front, values-based, lifestyle, centric career, place.
and just assumes people know what that means.
Because you can wear that shirt and be like,
and then offer high fives to people.
And then they're confused and they kind of walk by.
And that's the type of fun you could have in it.
Anyways, when we open our store to sell that shirt,
we would of course use Shopify.
It's what basically everyone I know in this game who sells their own things.
They use Shopify because it makes it easier and it works well.
So you can sign up now for a $1 per month trial period at Shopify.
dot com slash deep but just put that into your browser all lowercase go to shopify.com slash deep all
lowercase to grow your business no matter what stage you're in shopify.com slash deep
we also want to talk about our good friends at element look healthy hydration isn't just
about drinking water it's about water and electrolytes it makes sense you lose both water and
when you sweat, both need to be replaced to prevent muscle cramps, cramps, headaches, and energy dips.
But most people only replace the water because we keep being told, hey, just drink a lot of water.
But drinking water beyond just your thirst is a bad idea.
It could dilute blood electrolyte levels, especially sodium levels, which leads to headaches to low energy, cramps, confusion, or more.
The solution is not to stop drinking water.
It's to add more electrolytes to your water.
This is where Element LMNT enters the scene, created by former research biochemist,
chemist Rob Wolf and Keto Gaines founder Louis Valciniore.
Element has enough sodium, potassium, and magnesium to keep you feeling and performing your best.
Plus, zero sugar, zero artificial colors, and no dodgy ingredients in it.
You've got a lot of great flavors you can love, including citrus salt or raspberry salt.
I like citrus salt.
They also have spicy flavors like mango chili or chocolate salt, which you can mix into your morning coffee for a mean
mocha.
I was actually just out, as I mentioned,
Andrew Huberman Studio,
and I can tell you,
Huberman and I mixed up some element
to stay hydrated for,
I believe our episode was,
and I'm checking this here in the notes,
17 hours long.
Look, I get dehydrated,
not just from exercise,
but from talking all the time.
Element is absolutely what I drink
to get those electrolytes up
without having to have sugar
and all the other weird stuff.
So anyways, Element has a fantastic offer
just for us.
Go to drinkelement.com slash deep to get a free sample pack with any purchase.
That's drink element,
L MNT.com slash deep.
All right.
Let's get back to our show and do some questions.
Our first question comes from Claire.
Look, I always, for those who are watching on the video, by the way, you see I keep
checking over here because there's no Jesse.
So it's up to me to make sure that we're actually still recording, and I believe we still are.
All right, our first question comes from Claire.
Claire says the following.
I am judged based on productive output, where I have to complete seven or eight reports per day that take an hour each.
So instead of being able to do a few hours of deep work and take a break, I am working eight hours in a half deep work state.
I need to focus, but not that intensely.
I have a number of side projects I want to work on in my off time, but I'm tired.
Should I try to find a job that's not too hard?
Well, Claire, maybe.
But let's talk first about what you could do with this current job, and then maybe that will help you think through a little bit more critically about whether it's worth trying to change this job or not.
First, I want to just point out seven or eight hours of semi-deep work on reports is actually still a lot better than what a lot of people have, which is zero deep work hours plus about 10 hours of partial continuous attention, non-deep context switching.
overload nonsense. A day full of meetings and email and Slack, which is all administrative
overhead generated by the too many tasks that they've agreed to and are on their task list,
leading them to a nihilistic sense of absurdity that all I ever do is talk about work and
almost never, nothing actually gets done. Few exhaustions are more deranging than that of having
to switch your attention every few minutes and yet never feeling like you're making progress.
All this to say, hey, this kind of sounds nice that you can work on one thing at a time.
and aren't have to be on email and chat.
So, look, there's some silver lining here.
But here would be my first suggestion.
Why can't we change this to five to six reports per day?
Wouldn't that make your life a lot easier?
Now, look, I don't know the setup of your job.
Maybe that would mean having to take less money.
That might be worth it, by the way.
But I want to offer that right away less money.
Just do the reports better.
And just say, look, this seven to eight's too many.
My quality's flagging.
I want to do five or six.
Hey, but check my quality.
These are going to be great.
They're going to be better.
And I think this is better.
And just do it.
And they might end up being like, okay, fine, these are better.
Maybe you didn't need to be doing seven to eight.
You just sort of set that arbitrary standard.
Now maybe they say, no, no, no.
Even if they're better, we're going to pay you less.
That still might be worth it.
That still might be worth it.
Because even if they're paying you less,
five to six reports a day means five hours of work maybe.
And you could be done.
I sort of like to sound at that.
All right.
So let's think about this some more.
instead of doing one hour per report at a half state of deep work, I want you to consider doing
30 to 40 minutes of really intense deep work supported by rituals and a structured process
for how you go through these reports.
So it's not just our haphazard thinking that gives you 30 to 30 to 20 minutes of rest in between each report.
Or allows you to do two reports, take an hour off, two reports and an hour off.
I want to find a way that you're not going constantly, but you have more of a rhythm of intensity
and non-intensity.
Now, if you're working 30 to 40 minutes and then taking a break, you're going to want to make those breaks.
You have to be careful with those breaks.
You have to take what I call deep breaks, which means you need to be careful not to have this break be a hard context shift.
You don't want to look at an email or unrelated, highly emotionally salient information.
You're going to want these other breaks to focus on things that don't really change your context too much so that you can 20 minutes later get back into the next report without having.
to start from scratch.
So try those two things.
And I think
this could be better. Okay, I keep
those who are watching the video, see I keep looking around
because I have a
mysterious buzzing
happening in my ear here. Hold on a second.
I'm doing some live debugging. I don't think this is showing up
on the recording must driving me crazy. Hold on one second.
All right, well,
that's exciting podcasting right there.
Is what you get for solo podcasting.
By the way, we're pretty svel.
with one producer here.
Some shows are like that.
A lot of other shows I've noticed where really they have a lot of pretty large teams.
I think we're pretty Sevelt here.
Our next question comes from Evan.
Evan says, I'm in the early stages of my career and realize that a disproportionate
amount of success in the corporate world depends on your ability to sell yourself.
I've seen competent, quiet managers get fired while talking heads get steadily promoted.
How do I sell my?
skills better and if needed interview better.
Well, Evan, this is a key place where I want to bring up one of the pitfalls that we discussed
when talking about the story of Jewel in the deep dive, which was the fun run versus interval
training pitfall.
What says the key here is to not to write your own story about what matters, but to learn
what actually does matter.
All right.
So it's very tempting in this type of situation.
They come up with what you want to be important.
This is what I want to work on.
And if I do this, then I'm going to get more notice.
I'm going to be more successful because I like the sound of it.
I like the sound of it.
It's tractable.
It's not too hard, but it sounds good.
No, you need to go figure out for the people who are good at what you see as being needed for success,
the people who are good who are getting steadily promoted.
What specifically are they doing that matters?
This might mean actually talking to them.
I want to learn from you.
How did you get this promotion?
What about this one?
key. What were you doing that other people who are up for that promotion didn't do?
Learn what really matters. You might discover, for example, that actually it's not about them
selling themselves. Like, maybe it turns out, and I've been down this road before in my own life,
where I thought it was a marketing thing mattered, and it turned out like, no, actually the thing
they were doing was just better than what I'm doing. So my turnout, oh, this is the skill that really matters,
it's very hard, I'm doing that okay, they're doing it better, this is not about them selling themselves.
Or maybe it is about selling themselves, but you learn out.
what that means. What aspect of selling themselves is it that in the end really matters?
So you've got to get to the bottom of what matters. Don't write your own story. And then you can
decide, do I want to do that or not? And if so, what's my training regime and let's get after
it systematically, head down relentlessly? And if not, at least you know why not. Oh, this is
harder or requires sacrifices that I'm not right now willing to make. And by the way, that second
answer is fine as well. There's a technological piece to this because a lot of people have this sense
about social media promotion.
I think what matters is that professor, that manager, that writer, it's what they're doing
on social media that matters.
So maybe I need to do more of that.
If I just did more of that, I'd be more successful, right?
It's a common story that we tell ourselves when we're looking at self-promotion and success.
But when you dig deep in a lot of these cases, it turns out it's not the key.
The key is what they're doing is good.
They're doing something different.
They got lucky.
You know, so anyways, reality is more complicated.
You got to actually confront the reality.
Let's move on here.
We got Mike.
Mike says I'm an animator and I have good productivity and focus in the office.
However, I struggle to work on my personal projects at home.
I only do tasks that have the least resistance such as organizing files instead of doing the actual work.
How can I do the hard tasks for my personal projects?
Well, Mike, first of all, the stuff you're mentioning as Leaser
resistance such as organizing files.
Maybe this is not so unimportant.
A lot of what's important in household labor is actually pretty organizational.
It's keeping the household as basically a pseudo-business running well, which is often less
about big leaps of deep work or Bravo performance and more about actually keeping a lot of
balls very carefully moving in the air, so none of them fall.
Also, you might consider just doing fewer projects and making the projects you do better.
So when it comes to personal projects, there's a couple of reasons why you might not be coming back to them.
There's a couple of reasons why you might be looking to lesser resistant alternatives.
One could be you don't really love the project.
It was just like, I want to do this, I want to learn Spanish.
And you don't really love the idea.
You're not that excited about it.
And you're tired because you have a hard job and you're trying to take care of your house and maybe your family.
And that limited time and energy, if it's a project you don't love, your mind might say no mas.
That's what I did there.
That was Spanish.
Here's the other problem.
Maybe you do love the project, but your plan stinks.
Like, I want to be a novelist.
And so, like, why am I just not going down to my writing room and writing?
Because your mind says, that's just not, that's not enough.
You go into that room and writing is not going to produce a novel that's going to sell.
We need to learn more about this.
We've got to get better at writing.
We need an editor.
You know this is not a good plan.
Your brain knows it's not a good plan.
And so when you're saying maybe I should go spend some hours writing at the library or whatever,
your brain says, let's organize the files.
Come on, let's get real.
It's a good future plan evaluator.
So maybe you need fewer projects, and the projects you choose need to be better.
But also just ease up.
You know, I came across like several in recent weeks meeting impressive people while working on book promotion who had the same thing.
They told me the same thing.
They don't really have a lot of hobbies right now.
They're trying to do something professionally is really important.
They have families.
They're trying to keep their health up because they're reaching middle age and it matters.
a lot of people my age and my situation, for example, just don't have a lot of personal projects.
That's fine too.
You don't have to have a lot of personal projects.
Having a good job.
Staying like keeping your body running.
Being a leader for your family.
Like, that's a lot.
That's a hard job.
So if you're not feeling it right now in your current stage of life, you're not out there doing the complicated hobbies or whatever, you can ease up on yourself a little bit.
I think that's okay.
We don't always have to be doing that, especially if our setup is not one that makes that.
easy to do if we don't have a highly autonomous set up with a lot of time or it's an activity
that we've done for a long time and really love.
I got a question here from Elena.
Elena says my day consists of waking up at 5 a.m. getting ready for the gym, reading for
15 to 20 minutes, returning from the gym by 7.30, finishing showering, having breakfast by almost
nine. Currently, I can't say that I have rare and valuable skills to offer and I have a job from
nine to six that doesn't offer that many opportunities to develop those skills either, although
it pays very well. In this scenario, how can I do less at a natural pace, but at least include
a chunk of deliberate practice into my day to learn rare and valuable skills that allow me to
build a remarkable life without falling into busyness? Oh, Elena, you've got a lot going on.
I mean, look, I'm very impressed by your drive here. But let's slow down a little bit because
I worry that you're approaching the problem of wanting a slow.
lower work life by pushing more fast activity into it.
And that might not be the right way to solve this.
Let me be specific here.
This is hypothetical.
I don't know the exact details of your situation.
But let me give you a sense about this.
What if we instead said we're going to make these changes?
Your goal is to end your day at 4.30 instead of 6.
You're going to go to the gym at 4.30 instead.
Hold on to the complaint for now.
I'll never get my work done if I finish at 6.
People will notice.
That's too early.
hold that aside for now.
It's going to be our goal.
To finish work by a 4.30, go to the gym then.
Now, this means you don't have to wake up at 5.
Now you can actually sleep, get more sleep, sleep to a more reasonable hour.
Using that extra time, even sleeping later, you're going to be able to start your work day earlier.
Because we've gotten rid of this time in the gym and the morning reading.
So you can start your work earlier and do it in a very demonstrable way.
The key idea from slow productivity is that we're, we use a lot of pseudo productivity right now.
This idea of using visible activity as a proxy for useful effort.
So lean into that a little bit, take advantage of that, be visibly starting your workday a little bit earlier,
but spend the first hour of that workday doing deliberate practice on a skill that you want to get really good at.
So going back to the jewel example, you've isolated a rare and valuable skill you do want to develop.
You have the first hour of every day you're doing deliberate practice.
your bosses don't necessarily know that's what you're doing.
They just know that like, hey, Elena's here, it's 8 or it's 830, and she's getting after it.
And they don't know what you're really doing is training more than, you know, answering emails or doing something else.
Now, because you're starting work earlier, it's not as big of a deal that you're ending earlier.
Now, you also still have to get better at your work itself.
Like, if you're working from 9 to 6, like probably, I'm going to guess this is a pretty haphazard day.
So you know that you know the stuff we talk about on here.
you need multi-scale planning.
You probably need to reduce as a key idea from slow productivity.
Reduce a number of things you're actively working on at once.
Here's the three things I'm working on right now actively.
These five things I'm waiting to work on as I finish one of these.
I'll pull one of those in.
This reduces the administrative overhead you're facing any one moment,
which allows you to actually move faster with completion.
There's a whole chapter in slow productivity that gives you specific step-by-step tactics
for how to do this in your job in a way that,
people will tolerate and will really work really well.
You do these things so that you're able to get more work done, the right work done, more effectively,
and you'll be producing more by 430 than you were by 6, and your bosses think you're starting
work early anyways, and they're like, oh, Elena's really into exercise, and she comes in early,
she leaves a little early, she does really good work, this is great, but you've transformed
your life in this plan.
Now you're not waking up at 5, you're getting an hour of deliberate practice in, you're
ending your workday with an exercise, which I do.
I think it's a great way to transition from work mode into after work mode.
By six now, when you used to finish work, you're done with your exercise and you're done with your work.
You got some sleep.
You did your deliberate practice.
And you can read at night.
That could be like a really good activity is that you read instead of watching TV show.
You have a lot of, you have this evening free now.
You don't have to go to bed at nine because you're waking up so early.
So, you know, I don't know if for your particular situation, that particular reconfiguration works,
but it's a good sample reconfiguration
because it highlights the possibilities here.
It highlights the possibilities that you have
when you think about slowness,
that structuring your time,
be more careful about when you do things,
you can produce a lot and be very successful.
You have more options than you think
about how you produce a lot,
how you're successful.
You can take the reins a little bit more
to make your life more sustainable.
All right, let's do one last question here.
This one's from Cameron.
Cameron says,
I have a hard job
and I'm trying to use the deep life stack 2.0 to balance everything.
For my discipline stack, I take daily walks, go to the gym, and read.
How is this different than the value stack where I create rituals and routines for hard work?
Well, Cameron, I wanted to end with a little bit of deep life pontificating, I guess I would say,
the bigger picture here of living a deep life, which encompasses a lot more than just work.
We talked a lot in today's episode specifically about knowledge work and using
quality to slow down and getting away from busyness and strategies to get there.
But I like to bring it back in the end to the broader goal here, which is work is one part
of an overall deep life.
And that's really our goal in the show is in this world that's increasingly defined by technological
forces, by email, by social media, by artificial intelligence, all these forces that are shaping
our lives and reshaping our lives and destabilizing things that we know and making things
harder or weird or newer.
How do we build a life that's deep and rooted, that's really human that we like, this meaningful,
that's sustainable.
This has a lot more to do than just work.
So I want to end on that question.
Now, Cameron, I think the issue here is you're mixing things up.
So when we talk about values in the context of the deep life,
when we talk about rituals and routines for values,
these are not rituals and routines for hard work, as you write here.
They're rituals and routines for reinforcing your values,
and your values have nothing to do with work.
Your values are the underlying things
that you think are critical to a life well-lived.
These are the things that if there was a life,
an apocalypse and you're starting over.
You're escaping
from the vampire cannibals.
The things that you would rebuild from.
The respect for other individuals,
the being of infinite worth, leadership and character,
integrity, that are trying to
be someone who produces things of
impact, showing up when people
need to be there. I mean, these are
values. Routines and rituals are
about reinforcing these, these most
fundamental atoms of what actually
comprises the human life
well-lived. It's going to do with hard work. So what are routines and rituals that reinforce
these values? I mean, rituals are things that you do on a regular basis that helps reconnect
you to these things you care about. And it could be the gratitude walk you do through the woods,
to reconnect to the wonders of the world. It could be a ritual built instead around prayer,
that connect you to the divine as a source of strength, the good.
through the hardships of life. Routines here could be things you just do on the regular
to help make sure that you're connected to your values, things that are actually
have practical values. Rituals have no practical values other than just to reinforce a value. Routines
are things you do to put those values regularly into your life. I volunteer two days
a week because that pragmatically puts one of these things I value into my life on a
regular basis. For example, I read five books a month. There's a life.
of the mind as like this Aristotelian theological goal of the human existence is important to me,
that this routine of reading every day. So I read five books, so I can get to five books a month
because that puts my value into action. So rituals is just about reinforcing psychologically the
importance of a value to you. Routines are about pragmatically putting values into actions
on a regular basis into your life. And this is not about hard work. It's not about going to the
gym. It's really about the things to make humans, humans. And why this is,
so important in the context of a deep life is that work comes and goes and it goes well and it goes
bad and sometimes it's in your control and sometimes that's not and sometimes you get sick and you can't
work the way you used to work before or you thought you're going to be really good at this and people
come along and say no you're not or you have the big plan and it fails and you lose all the money
and you have to start over and it's kind of humiliating so it can't just be work that you're trying
to build this whole edifice on it's got to be something deeper more fundamental more human and that is
that's what i mean by values but cameron i appreciate the question
because it allowed us to talk deeper about the deep life.
All right, so speaking about the deep life,
I mentioned reading as part of it,
which means I want to talk about the books I read in February.
First, I want to briefly mention another sponsor that makes this show possible.
That's our friends at My Body Tutor.
I've known Adam Gilbert, My Body Tutor's founders for many years.
He's my go-toe guy for fitness advice.
His company, My Body Tudor, is a fantastically smart idea
because it is a 100% online coaching program.
So you can get a coach like the Hollywood stars have
when they prepare for a role in a movie.
But instead of having to have someone come to your house a great expense,
you can interact with them online.
So you get that consistency and tailored help,
the accountability that comes with it,
without the expense of having to have someone in your home gym
telling you to use the combat ropes.
So the way it works is you get to assign this coach,
you tell them what you care about with your health journey.
We help you figure out, like, what are we going to do with your diet?
And let's come up with a plan here that makes sense for you and your circumstances.
What are we going to do with your exercises that makes sense for you and your circumstances?
And then every day you check in with that coach using the easy online app and they see and
they respond every day.
And if you have questions, like, hey, this isn't working for me.
Like, let's tailor that so it does.
You have a one-off situation.
The holidays are coming up.
What do I do about this?
They give you one-off specific advice for your particular situation.
and you build a relationship with your coast.
It's not just tailored advice, but it's the accountability of knowing they're looking at what you did and didn't do.
It's miraculous how well it works.
If you really want to get healthier, this is the way to do it.
You go to My Body Tudor, T-U-T-O-R.
Go to MyBodytutor.com.
And when you do mention deep questions when you sign up, and Adam will give you $50 off your first month.
Just mention that podcast when you sign up and it'll give you $50 off.
My Body Tudor, it is the way to get healthy.
year. I also want to talk about our longtime friends at Blinkist. Blinkis is an app that gives you
more than 6,500 book summaries and expert-led audio guides to read and listen to in just
15 minutes per title. You can access best in class actionable knowledge from 27 categories
such as productivity, psychology, and more, and also get entertained at the same time.
The way Jesse and I use Blinkis is as a triage tool for the books.
we read.
There's a book that we think might be important.
We will put it on a list.
And they help make the decision
about whether or not we buy that book.
We will read the blink,
which is what they call the 15-minute summary
of the book.
I'll sometimes listen to them.
Jesse likes to read them.
This gives you a really good sense about the book.
Sometimes once you get that 15-minute summary,
you're like, okay, this isn't quite for me.
I get the gist of it.
I don't want to spend a week with this book.
But I got the main ideas.
That's useful.
And sometimes the blitzers.
Blink, it's like, oh, that's exactly what I wanted.
That's what I was looking for.
Great.
Let me definitely buy this book.
And it makes your success rate with nonfiction book buying.
The rate at which you actually love and get something out of the books you buy go from
what would normally be for most people like 50-50 to more like 90 to 95% success rate.
Now, there's other reasons why to use Blinkist, sort of to learn about a whole new field
without having to read all the books or just because they're entertaining.
A lot of ways to use it.
People blink in different ways.
But I like to use it as a triage tool for the.
the reading life. However you use it, it is a really useful tool. They also have a new feature
called Blinkus Connect, which will allow you to give another person unlimited access for free.
It's basically a two, four, one deal. So that's cool as well. So right now, Blinkist has a special
offer just for our audience. Go to Blinkus.com slash deep to start your seven day free trial,
and you will get 40% off a Blinkist premium membership if you sign up. That's Blinkist spelled BLI
I-N-K-I-S-T, Blinkus.com slash deep to get 40% off, any seven-day free trial.
Blinkus.com slash deep.
And now for a limited time, you can even use Blinkus Connect to share your premium account.
You will get two premium subscriptions for the price of one at Blinkus.com slash deep.
All right, final segment of the episode.
At the beginning of each month, I like to review the books I read in the previous month.
It's were in March, so I need to summarize the books I read in February 2024.
As usual, my goal is to read five books a month.
So here's what I read in February.
Number one, the Sabbath by Abraham Joshua Heschel.
I wrote a newsletter post about this.
You can find that at calnewport.com slash blog from a month or two ago from February when I finished it.
Worth reading, because I think it's a interesting, fantastic book.
There's a secular message in this.
It's not just Jewish theology.
There's a secular message in this about work.
and what there is outside of work.
It's not just about like the day of rest captures not just preparation to work better.
But ancient Jewish scripture tells you the day of rest is about actually anticipating the kingdom of God to come,
which is a way we can secularize that as thinking about rest sometimes is about rest itself,
about admiring and having gratitude for the other parts of life that are unrelated to work.
It's a short book, beautifully written from the 50s.
I really enjoyed it.
I also really enjoyed the second book I read, which was Making,
movies by Sidney Lumet.
Fantastic, just nuts and bolts book about how you make a major motion picture.
Sidney Lumet, of course, being this fantastic director.
I went back and watched several of his movies after reading this book.
I watched Murder on the Orient Express, the Kenneth Branagh version.
Not the Kenneth Branagh version.
That's the new version.
His version, City Lumet's version is from the 1970s as Sean Connery is in it.
I also went back and I'd never seen before Dog Day Afternoon, which I really enjoyed.
It's a fantastic movie.
But a cool book because basically each chapter is a different part of the movie production process and he gets into it.
But a lot of examples from his own experiences and you really get a sense of like what it's like to make a movie.
If you're a cinephile or you like movies, you sort of have to read this book.
I'm kind of embarrassed.
It took me this long, but I'm glad I got to it.
Speaking of being embarrassed, it took so long, I went ahead and read Killers of the Fluff.
Moon by David Grand.
So, you know, each year I try, my wife and I try to watch all of the movies nominated
for Best Picture.
There's 10 of them now, so it could be hard.
But this year we succeeded.
We saw all 10.
After we watched Killers of the Flower Moon, I wanted to read the book because I had some
questions about what happened in the movie.
And it's classic David Grant.
David Grant's a great New Yorker writer.
He's very good at these type of books where he goes to the archives for a couple of years
and pulls out these narratives with interesting.
weird, flawed characters, and then lets them unfold with the pace of a mystery novel.
There's a Bravo performance in writing.
Great book.
Great movie, too.
Very epic.
I read Orthodoxy by J.K. Chesterton.
I didn't like it as much as I thought.
I was thinking that in his argument for the power of orthodoxy, so this is sort of Christian
Apologia, there would be something interesting in there about ritual and routines.
It was okay.
It wasn't as powerful of an apology as I expected.
It was fine.
It's a short book.
Smart writer, but it's not punching the gut apology, so maybe worth passing on.
Finally, I read The Good Shepherd by C.S. Forrester,
1950s book about a convoy crossing the North Atlantic at World War II.
It takes place entirely, entirely follows in real time, the commander of a destroyer.
that's helping to protect this convoy.
They made a movie about this recently.
Greyhound starring Tom Hanks,
fantastic movie I recommend it.
This is the book it's based on.
I love this book.
This has to be one of the original techno thrillers,
because what Forrester does here
is he just throws you into this world.
You never leave.
It's third-party,
third-person omniscient, right?
The narrator.
So you get access to the thoughts
of this captain,
but it's the only character that it follows.
So he's always in the scene.
You see nothing,
where the captain is, it's a commander, I guess, as a destroyer, nothing where the commander's
not there. And the only thoughts you get access to is the commanders. The third person,
omniscient but focus on a single character. And it just throws you into this, like, technical
world. All the lingo, no explanation. You just sort of piece it together as it goes along,
like what's going on. And it's nail-biting. And he really does capture the sort of the physical
stress, the psychological fatigue of what it was like to be under attack by a U-boat Wolfpack as you're
trying to direct these convoys across.
And you begin to learn in the rhythms of like how this works.
But it's techno thriller at its finest.
It's a proto-techno-thriller.
I'm probably going to buy a first edition of this.
I think it'll be a cool thing to have in my collection because I love techno thrillers.
And this is like a prime example of it, fast-paced in the world, surrounded by it.
You begin to learn and the feeling of being that world is transmitted.
And then you make it through the other side.
You get a sigh of relief.
the Tom Hanks movie, by the way, does a fantastic job of capturing the feel of this book.
I recommend watching Greyhound.
I think it's on Apple TV Plus.
Probably my favorite.
That and the Sabbath were my two favorites.
Making movies, killers.
They're all, except for Orthodoxy, which was fine.
The other four books I read, this was a good month, were really fantastic.
So I'd recommend all of them.
All right, well, speaking of fantastic, what is more fantastic than me being back in my Deep Work HQ?
Next week, Jesse will rejoin me.
will be back to our normal type of episodes and our normal type of topics, et cetera.
I'm just really happy to be back.
Check out slow productivity.
My new book, if you like the type of things you hear about at the show, you can find it
anywhere that books are sold.
I'll be back next week.
Until then, as always, stay deep.
Hi, it's Cal here.
One more thing before you go.
If you like the Deep Questions podcast, you will love my email newsletter, which you can
sign up for at calnewport.com. Each week I send out a new essay about the theory or practice of living
deeply. I've been writing this newsletter since 2007 and over 70,000 subscribers get it sent to their
inboxes each week. So if you are serious about resisting the forces of distraction and shallowness
that afflict our world, you got to sign up for my newsletter at calnewport.com and get some
deep wisdom delivered to your inbox each week.
