Deep Questions with Cal Newport - Ep. 368: I Want Work-Life Balance. Am I Doomed to Mediocrity?
Episode Date: September 1, 2025A 22-year-old made a splash recently when he published a Wall Street Journal op-ed claiming that work-life balance makes you mediocre. He went on to brag about how sleeping less than 4 hours a night a...nd gaining 80 pounds helped him become a millionaire. In this episode, Cal wades into the furious debate this article sparked. He argues that once you look past the author’s dorm bro bravado, the kid does actually ask a good question. It’s just that his answers are lacking. Cal then tackles listener questions and reviews the books he read in August.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: I Want Work-Life Balance. Am I Doomed to Mediocrity? [1:06]Is it possible to stay focused when having to check my phone for text messages? [42:20]When did you switch back to your teaching schedule to your summer schedule? [44:05]How has your deep life evolved since Episode 1? [49:22]How can I stop obsessively checking my work email? [53:47]Can you summarize how values and strategic planning documents, birthday projects and lifestyle centric planning combine? [58:14]CASE STUDY: Organizing household admin [1:01:44]CALL: How to tame Trello cards [1:06:39]AUGUST BOOKS: The 5 books Cal read in August 2025 [1:13:26] Boundless Realm (Foxx Note)Collisions (Alec Nevala-Lee)Before the Birds Sang Words (Ken Bruce)Desperation Reef (T Jefferson Parker)Shift (Hugh Howey)Links:Buy Cal’s latest book, “Slow Productivity” at calnewport.com/slowGet a signed copy of Cal’s “Slow Productivity” at peoplesbooktakoma.com/event/cal-newport/Cal’s monthly book directory: bramses.notion.site/059db2641def4a88988b4d2cee4657ba?https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VX1XHMlX1J0Thanks to our Sponsors: ridge.com (use code “Cal”)drinklmnt.com/deepshopify.com/deepcalderalab.com/deepThanks to Jesse Miller for production, Jay Kerstens for the intro 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
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Last month, a 22-year-old entrepreneur named Amel Barr wrote a Wall Street Journal op-ed with a provocative title.
Work-life balance will keep you mediocre.
In it, Barr claims financial success requires sacrificing sleep, health, and social connections in your 20s.
This article annoyed a lot of people, including me, but here's a key question that has stuck around.
Is it possible that Barr might be at least partly right?
This is a debate worth having, and it's exactly what we're going to get into today.
I'm Cal Newport, and this is Deep Questions.
Today's episode, I want work-life balance.
Am I doomed to mediocrity?
All right, so we should start with the actual op-ed itself.
I'm going to bring this up here on the screen, if you could do that, Jesse,
for people who are watching instead of just listening.
So as mentioned, the title of this article is,
Work-Life Balance Will Keep You Mediocre.
The subhead was for Financial Freedom by age 30.
Optimize ruthlessly during your peak, physical, and cognitive years.
This came out online August 18th.
This came out in print the next day on August 19th.
What I want to do here is just read you a few quotes from the article
that should give you an idea of what exactly.
the author is arguing.
So I want to start where the author sort of introduces himself a little bit more.
He says, I'm 22, and I've built two companies that together are valued at more than $20 million.
Jumping down here, when people ask how I did it, the answer isn't what they expect or want to hear.
I eliminated work-life balance entirely and just worked.
When you front load success early, you buy the luxury of choice for the rest of your life.
That's sort of like his big claim.
Let's get some more details from the article.
Here's a quote from a couple paragraphs later.
During my first year working on Step Up Social, I averaged three and a half hours of sleep
a night and had about 12.5 hours every day to focus on business.
The physical and mental toll was brutal.
I gained 80 pounds, lived a lot of life.
on Red Bull and struggled with anxiety.
But this level of intensity was the only way to build a multimillion dollar company.
Eddie words from Mr. Barr.
I have a couple other quotes I want to read here.
Here's another one.
I steer clear of courses that banned laptops in the classroom because I couldn't be
offline for three or more hours a day when my team and clients needed me.
Plus, it is at 1999, and that kind of thinking won't get us anywhere.
Another piece of advice he has.
Every commitment had to justify its place on my calendar with social events, casual hangouts,
and even family gatherings weighed against business priorities.
I constantly felt guilty about missing important moments with loved ones.
But ironically, the relationships that mattered most grew stronger because the time I did spend with them was deeply intentional.
That's good to hear.
I appreciate that.
He also says, the path I chose was painful.
There's no sugarcoding the mental health struggles, the physical deterioration.
or the social isolation that came with this intensity.
But in a winner-take-all economy, extreme efficiency during your peak physical and mental years
becomes a baseline for building wealth that lasts a lifetime.
All right.
Well, there we go.
There's some strong statements from a precocious young man.
I want to play a little audio here of the MLBarr himself.
This is him appearing on Fox and Friends in the aftermath.
of this op-ed, sort of explaining why he wrote it and his inspiration. So let's play that clip
there for a second there, Jesse. Tell me how you did it. Yeah. Well, it was a lot of sacrifice,
and it wasn't easy, and that's not necessarily something everyone wants to hear. But the truth is to
have extraordinary achievements, I think you have to make extraordinary sacrifice.
All right. So what was your motivation behind us? I saw folks like Elon, you know, that slept
on factory floors to build Tesla and, like, people like Kobe Bryant, you know, that trained at 4 a.m.
even on the off season.
Yeah.
And so I made those same decisions to grow my business.
Elon and Kobe.
This is very gin.
It's very jincy, Jesse.
As you can imagine, this op-ed generated a lot of reaction.
The Wall Street Journal article itself has over 2,000 comments just on the article
itself, lots of follow-up media, lots of follow-up articles, lots of discussion on social media
on Reddit and other types of places where people discuss these things.
As mentioned, Barr went on Fox business, and then that earned them a call-up.
to Fox and Friends on the main Fox channel.
Much of the feedback that he generated, probably not surprisingly, given what I've read you so far,
was negative.
So here's a comment from the original article I want to read here that caught my attention.
I checked the publication date twice.
Just to be sure, this wasn't an old April Fool's Day prank.
The authoritative tone of the 22-year-old author is comical.
Does anyone over the age of 30 actually endorse a front-loading lifestyle, and that he
really used the word mediocre to describe a person who earns an average wage, I can't help
but suspect Andrew Tate peer-reviewed this op-ed.
Here's another reaction.
This one came from Reddit.
My dad was always away at the office, and I really only have a few memories of him.
He caught a sudden illness and died in his early 40s when I was a teenager.
I'll be mediocre and take my kids camping instead.
Cheers, I'm ill.
And finally, here's a letter to the editor from the Wall Street Journal.
Mr. Barr's story is no national model.
It rests on the peculiar economics of infinitely scalable digital platforms.
Does he really believe the country would be richer if more young Americans spent their peak years optimizing algorithms on Chinese social media platforms rather than studying, soldiering, or otherwise fulfilling their civic duty?
So people weren't that happy.
I definitely got this a lot, Jesse.
In my personal inbox, it came over my various text threads.
this came in some, I guess, right, in our official emails as well.
Yeah, we definitely got some emails about it.
Yeah, this definitely generated some debate.
You probably had a similar reaction to me, a little bit of Ginzy reaction there, right?
Little knee jerk like, uh-oh, 20-year-olds, 22-year-olds telling me what to do.
What do his businesses do?
You know, I looked into that.
It's a little bit tricky, which I think is always the point with sort of dorm room
bro businesses. It's always a little tricky to pick apart what they're actually doing.
So he started a company, as best I can tell, that was called Step Up Social, which did exactly what
you'd expect a 20-year-old's business to do. It helped TikTok influencers, you know, have more
successful channels and connect to brands that want to have sponsorships on their TikTok channel.
So sort of like Peak Gen Z. And then it was acquired or he rebranded it or it merged with another
company. There's, you know, our researcher newsletter director, Nate,
found some LinkedIn post somewhere where the guy talked about how his deal to merge this with another network involved instead of money, then buying him a Porsche or something.
So I don't know.
Then he started this other company called flagship education, no, flash pass education, not to be mistaken for the thing you buy at Universal Studios to get ahead of the lines.
It's kind of, I can't quite figure out what's going on with this thing.
In theory, it's like a flash card program you can use to get digitally certified.
So do like kind of online courses on topics to give you a certification that can help you get jobs.
But I know he won a business plan contest, student business plan contest and got a grant from the state of Ohio to work on this.
There's no actual products available on the website, just links that say book a demo.
It has testimonials.
But unless every user so far, a flash pass is also a model, they're clearly.
stock photography. I mean, it's like beautifully lit, imposed, you know, with their backpack on
the campus. It's, it looks like a community college brochure. So I don't know what's going on.
Look, these are, I'm sure they're, you can at that age sort of trade your youth and energy
for essentially like way. Like you can kind of hustle and like I'm going to get brands interested
and hey, I'm going to match you up with this, you, this TikTok person and will you pay for
them and I'll take a cut? And so I don't quite know what's going on. It's not,
not to knock
a meal bar
but it's not
Bill Gates
leaving Harvard
for Microsoft
where it was
here is our
clear IP
on which you
can build a
scalable business model
that I'm
going to take on
investment right
away to scale
this is not
Mark Zuckerberg
leaving Harvard
after he already
had venture
commitments
right?
This is not
the
Sergei
and Larry
at Stanford
saying we've
developed
you know
this this
page rank
algorithm
that is revolutionary
for web search
and we have
funding from
Sequoia
we're going to
start Google
right
like this is
it's not that it's sort of the types of businesses and I've had these businesses myself
when I was young that 20 year old start is best I can tell um all right so there we go we got this
guy he wrote this op-ed people are upset it did however you know as as I hinted out earlier
it kind of stuck with me right because I wanted to be careful it's easy to be upset about the fact
this kid is young it's easy to be upset about the fact that these are like
room businesses and no one really knows what they are and it's not I invented a new web search,
right?
So it's easy to be kind of dismissive.
But not everyone thinks that the basic points that Barr is making here is wrong.
Just last week, Palantir CEO Alex Karp said something similar.
I'm reading a quote here.
I've never met someone really successful who had a great social life at 20.
Susie Welch, she's a well-known professor at the NYU Stern School of Business, wrote into the Wall Street Journal in response to this op-ed, and she said, don't get me wrong.
I don't consider Mr. Barr a boy genius.
He says dumb things, dot, dot, dot, but I do give him points for saying something that I only mutter to my MBA students while also asking forgiveness for being an oldster.
You can't well-being yourself to wealth.
There are going to be seasons of misery, which could last years.
That might not be fair, but it's how life tends to go.
So there's something in this 22-year-old's op-ed that I don't think we can just dismiss out of hand.
And in particular, there's one quote I want to pull out, which to me is the most interesting, intriguing, and impactful quote of this entire op-ed.
And this is where Barr says the following.
I'm not suggesting that everyone eliminate work-life balance, but rather arguing that for ambitious young people who want to build wealth,
traditional balance is a trap that will keep you comfortably mediocre.
That is really the core of his argument, not whether or not he's really a good entrepreneur,
not or not whether or not his claim at the end of the article that he's going to be a billionaire by 30 and solve climate change is cringeworthy or not.
But this idea, work-life balance is a path to mediocrity.
That idea is sort of sticky and uncomfortable.
It sticks with us a little bit.
Like, is that true?
A lot of us who do think about more than just work, often in our quiet moments, maybe wonder about this.
So I want to take a closer look at this claim because I think it really matters.
And I think it needs a more systematic investigation than what we're getting with just this sort of back-and-forth conversation on long.
So let's do that.
Now, I want to start by saying, what do we mean by mediocre?
Work-life balance will make you mediocre.
What do we mean by mediocre?
I think the right way to actually answer those questions, we have to flip it around.
And we have to say, what does it mean to you to not be mediocre?
And, of course, that's a clunky way of saying, what does it mean to you to be successful in your professional life?
We have to answer that more refined question, right?
So here's our more refined question.
how does work-life balance impact your attempts to be successful in your professional life?
I think that's the better way to actually get at what's going on here.
But when we say it that way, right away, we see a problem.
What do you mean by successful?
There's a lot of different definitions that people have for not being mediocre,
what it means to have a successful working life.
And the answer to this question of, does work-life balance get in the way,
depends on what definition of successful that we're actually using.
So I want to get really systematic here.
In response to popular demand, I haven't done this in a while, Jesse, but people, especially, I would say fine art lovers among our audience, art critics, people who really enjoy seeing really good draftsmanship have said, why haven't you done your tablet recently?
So I'm doing it.
I'm bringing, for those who are watching instead of listening, and you know, you're welcome.
I'm going to build a chart here because we are going to get way more systematic than a meal bar did.
So for those who are listing, I have two columns on this chart.
On the left, it says success model, and on the right it says requirement.
So what I want to do here is go through the different common models that people have for what it means for their work life not to be mediocre.
And for each of those, I want to answer the question, what sacrifices are required?
In other words, what is the way to succeed with this model?
So we can see, do some of these require that we sacrifice work life balance and others don't?
Do they all, do none of them?
Let's get more systematic here.
All right, so I want to start by giving Barr his due.
And what I mean by that is there are certainly some particular definition of success
where what he's saying actually does in some sense hold.
All right, I'm going to put two in particular.
So the first thing I'm going to write here is startup exit.
Now, I'm not typing Jesse.
That's just my great handwriting.
I like it when you draw.
Jesse thinks it's calligraphy,
but it's just, you know,
my natural great handwriting.
Startup exit.
What do I mean by that?
Okay, this is a very common idea that some people have
for what it means to be successful in their career.
And that's like the notion of I have a startup,
probably a technology startup that has an exit that makes me a lot of money.
I think this is what Barr has in mind when he's thinking about mediocrity and success
is he's thinking what I want to do is have a startup that eventually is sell or acquired
and I make a lot of money,
tens if not hundreds of millions of dollars.
So what is required for this model of success to have a successful startup exit?
Well, if you're a venture-backed startup going for this, the investors are probably going to
demand that you grind.
So I'm going to write that down here on what's required.
I am going to write the word grind.
Whether or not you need it, this is what is expected in this particular field.
So if your model of success is I sell a company.
for a lot of money, a startup, a venture back company, you probably will have to grind.
Not as hard, probably as Barr was talking about.
We'd have a lot more heart attacks.
But they do expect you're answering emails.
You're having meetings.
You're staying there late.
You're working weekends.
Partially it's performative.
And partially because when you're in a tech startup, it's a small number of people doing a lot of things.
You haven't had time to hire yet.
And the only way to juggle everything is a sort of inefficiently try to touch on them all.
So in that world, Barr is sort of right.
All right.
Here is another world in which I think bar is sort of right.
I'm going to call this elite wage labor.
All right.
So these are jobs where there is a clear deal offered, no obfuscation.
Here's a clear deal.
If you have an elite education and you did really well in your elite education,
you're a top 20 school, what we're going to offer you is in exchange for you giving us a large number of hours.
So somewhere between 60 to 80 hours a week.
In exchange for you're giving us a large number of hours, we will pay you a very high salary for those hours.
So there are certain professions that offer this deal to the small segment of the population that happens to have elite college education.
So this would be working for a big law firm.
This would be working for a big consulting firm.
This would be working for a big finance firm.
That's just the deal they offer.
Your hours for money.
Now, the reason why they are demanding that many hours is that, like, typically you're actually being billed for those hours.
more hours you work, the more money they can make.
And so our agreement will be if we've gone through all the trouble of hiring this Harvard
kid, does it say work 80 hours a week?
So we can get as much money as possible out of you.
Finances is a little bit more complicated, but it's sort of just more of the culture there.
So if you're in one of those, if that's your model of success, we're still in a meal bar
territory.
What's required, you've got to have to grind a lot of hours.
That's just the way those industries work.
But here's the thing.
This is a very narrow band of economic.
economic activity. It's a very narrow band of economic activity that is open to only a very small
group of people. To really have access to like Silicon Valley funding, especially if you're young,
that is hard. You basically have to come out of a top technical program, you know, like MIT computer
science and got into an incubator program before they'll even listen to you. If you want to be one of
these elite wage labor jobs, you've got to be coming out of an IV or another top 20 type elite school.
And even then, only the best students who go through all the right work to do the interviewing right are going to get those positions.
a very small amount of people to which these particular jobs are actually open.
Interestingly, even though Emil Barr, I think, is probably basing his approach on the startup exit
success model, even he doesn't even have access to that world.
You know, he is doing, he is not running a venture back startup in the way that this model
demands.
These are, he's doing, these are more sort of, they're not solopreneur companies, but they're sort
like dorm room businesses.
Like, I'm trying to mix and match sponsors to TikTok influencers.
that's different than I've taken on, you know,
five million in Series A from Sequoia because we're going to build out the server farm for our search algorithm.
So he's sort of mimicking what is required of the sort of Elon Musk venture-backed tech company world,
even though he's not himself actually has access to that world.
Similarly, the elite wage labor world, it's pretty narrow.
If you are in one of those worlds, you do need to grind, but I think those are very narrow worlds.
And so we cannot generalize from those that in general work-life balance will make you mediocre.
In these industries, it's not even that work-life balance will make you mediocre.
You're just not allowed to have it.
It's just the agreement of the industries.
This is how many hours you have to work.
That's just what it is.
Okay.
But there are other definitions, I think, are far more common that people have in mind when they think about what does it mean to not be mediocre in their job.
And here, the answer of what's required to succeed starts to become more interesting.
So let's put down another common one.
one here. I'm going to call this
impact
and respect.
So for a lot of people, when they
think about successful career and avoiding mediocrity,
it is, I am doing something
that is high impact. It matters
and or I'm highly
respected for it.
This is very desirable to a lot of people
and it very much matches what a lot of people think
about as success. So you're a respected
artist or writer,
you know, academic or athlete or musician
or filmmaker. Sometimes
is you're having a really big impact on the world, your books really make a difference. Sometimes
it's just to respect. You're like Giro and Giro dreams of sushi where you have this, you know,
four-star Michelin sushi restaurant in the subway in Tokyo. And only a few hundred people have been there
that year. But everyone in the industry knows you're just the best in the world at making sushi.
And there's like a real meaning that comes out of that. This is a very common notion of what it
means to be successful. So what matters here? Is it grinding?
Well, no, I happen to know a lot about this because it's one of the models of success that I have been writing about for my entire career.
It's a model of success I really care about.
And what I've written about in multiple books and many articles, including some that date all the way back to when I was in my 20s, I found these Jesse's.
So I sort of have a counterpoint to what email bear was saying.
What matters here is relentlessly working on the things that make you better.
Not on what you want to do, not on busyness, but on the activities that make you.
better at your craft.
Sticking to those activities day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year.
You want to be a respected sushi chef day after day after day.
You're pushing your ability.
You're learning more.
You're pushing your ability at sushi.
You want to be a writer.
You write, right, right, right.
I started writing professionally when I was 20 years old.
I never stopped writing.
When I finish a book, it's another book.
When I finish that, it's another book.
Like, I am always working on books.
I'm always trying to make myself better.
That is what's required.
It's hard work.
But here's what it's not hard to do work.
Because when you're trying to improve yourself, it requires focus and deliberate practice, etc.
You can only do that so many hours in a day.
And then that's it.
He talks about Kobe Bryant.
Yeah, Kobe Bryant would wake or burly to practice, right?
But there's only so much that Kobe Bryant could practice in a day before I had to worry about injury.
You talk to any sort of professional athlete.
They're like, no, no, it's not a game of who can practice the more total hours.
Injury.
Rest and recovery is important.
And what matters is you're doing the exact right type of training relentlessly.
Offseason, what's the exact right thing to be doing in the off season?
In the season, what's the right thing to do in the season?
What's the exact amount of rest to get?
It's relentless and it's hard, but it doesn't require sleeping three hours.
It doesn't require, I don't see, you know, my family because there's only so much of this hard work you can do in any given day.
I relentlessly work on my writing.
I've been doing this since I was 20 years old.
I don't, I rarely work past 530.
I don't grind.
I don't stay up late.
I want to spend time with my family and my friends and my communities and my other types of interest.
I want to put in a minimum of 40 to 50 hours a week working on Halloween display decorations.
I think Jesse has seen what I have laid out in the other office right now.
We'll get into that later.
I care about hard work, but not hard to do work.
So that's what matters if we're going to talk about being high impact or high respected.
It's the long game.
So I'm going to say relentless depth.
Returning to the things that matter every day.
relentlessly, ignoring the distractions that want to take you away from that.
Does it make any one day particularly hard?
But you have to have the hard work of sticking with that.
So that is a different model than what a millbar is talking about.
All right.
There's other definitions, though.
What about remarkability?
What I mean about this is there's a lot of people when you say,
what is your definition of like a non-mediocre professional life?
They say, I want it to be remarkable, in a literal sense remarkable,
that other people remark about my life and what I do.
Like, that's really cool or that's really interesting.
Or, hey, did you know what this guy does?
Let me introduce you to him at the party or her at the party.
A lot of people, that's the definition of not being mediocre.
So maybe like you live in a really exotic place or have a really exotic job or you have like a really exotically sort of autonomous life.
There's certain people like this I've written about before.
Maybe you're like Laird Hamilton living on the North Shore of Maui waiting for the big waves to come, just sort of sitting around.
like exercising and bored until the waves come and then you go off in your jet skis and
do this sort of amazing feats of physical things or maybe like paul jarvis who i've written
about in slow productivity um and we talked about on the podcast all the time who sort of moved
from his busy web development life in vancouver to vancouver island to a small house in the woods
near a surf break on tolfino cut back his hours raised his rates made his life much cheaper right
They reduced their expenses.
As he says, there's not much to spend money on there.
It's kind of in the middle of nowhere.
And they surf and have this small town and have a greenhouse and keep chickens or whatever.
It's a remarkable life.
It's really interesting and different than what his peers were doing.
It might be like the Thames is, right?
Up there in Vermont, otherwise known online as the frugal woods.
I talked about them.
I interviewed Liz in my book, Digital Minimalism, where they were very frugal.
They saved a lot of money.
They were living right outside Boston and Cambridge, Central Square.
and they were very kind of frugal and like sort of saving money,
and they bought a property up in Vermont.
They moved up there, allowed her to stop working.
He kept working, but in a remote capacity.
They rented out their house in Boston,
which more or less covered the small mortgage they had on the house up in Vermont.
More recently, he was able to stop working.
They have this like life on this 55 acres where they do maple syruping
and they have apple orchards and trails and all this sort of,
outdoor quiet living with their kids in this local community.
That's an example of a remarkable life.
You remark on it, oh, I got to introduce you to these people.
They're doing something interesting.
All right.
If that's your definition of not being mediocre, how do you get there?
Well, it's not about eskewing work-life balance.
It tends to be much more about build career capital, have the courage to leverage it.
What I mean about that is you get good at something that has a sort of lasting
sustainable value to the market.
That can get you sort of a lasting
sustainable source of like income and stability
and then you have the courage to say I'm going
to build a really interesting life around that.
Like the frugal woods,
Nate was a computer
programmer basically for nonprofits
and they sort of worked out like this is a very useful skill.
We can't run our organization without you.
And it said, great, I don't want to try to maximize
salary with you anymore. I want to be able to work remotely
and on my own terms. And then we'll then
have the courage to build this whole life
up in the woods of Vermont around that
career capital. Laird Hamilton had the capital of, I surfed these crazy waves and I can get
just enough sponsorship money out of being shown in those surfing magazines surfing these waves
that sort of make ends meet and I can keep doing this. Paul Jarvis got really good at web
development and he said, okay, instead of growing a big company because there's all this demand now
for me, I'll just raise my rates and work less hours. So I will use this skill as the engine to move
to Vancouver Island and live by the surf break in Tolfino and have a greenhouse.
So it's career capital and courage is what matters here.
So we'll put down career capital and courage.
So not only is the answer not just grind, the answers differ depending on what your model is.
So we're being more systematic about this because, you know, that's the way I like to do it.
The final model of what people have in mind is what most people, just the average person, has in mind.
If you say, what do you think about like having a successful career?
Really what they envision is some variation of what we can call the post-war American dream.
I don't have family.
I live in a neighborhood I like.
Nice house.
I'm not worried about money.
Like we're financially stable.
I'm not stressed out about money.
We go on two interesting vacations a year.
We're close-knit communities that we're a part of.
We have good friends and hobbies.
I have spent a lot of time when my kid's life, picket fence, etc.
Starting the 60s, we began to sort of get bored with this and say it was bougie and this is not that interesting.
But talk to a GI in 1945.
They would have been like, this is like the best possible life you could offer.
Are you kidding me?
I'm not stressed about money.
I'm not stressed about my town being bombed out by, you know, a world war.
I have my own yard.
I have a car like my friends are here.
We can walk to the whatever.
I have a stable job that's interesting but not too demanding.
That is, for a lot of people, that's not mediocre.
to have something like that is the dream.
I have a family I love and spend time with and I'm not stressed about money.
My job is interesting.
And, you know, I don't know.
I'm in the bowling league.
That's what a lot of people are thinking about.
So how do you do that?
You get capable.
It's a term I'm playing with in my new book on The Deep Life that I'm writing right now.
It's the power, the overlooked power of capability.
What does it mean to be capable?
In the professional setting, I'm reliable.
I do the thing I say I'm going to do.
If I say I'm going to do this, I do it.
I do it when I say I'm going to do it.
I do it at a high level of quality.
I've got my act together.
You can trust me.
I'm capable, right?
I've got my arms on what's going on.
I don't take on too much work.
I choose to write projects that matter and I get them done.
And I'm professional and I'm nice and people like me.
We overlook how valuable capability is.
But if you are capable, almost any profession, almost any job you have, what are the
manager is going to worry about losing you?
Oh, we have a capable person.
They get stuff done.
They're good.
They choose to write products.
They don't get overloaded.
They're nice.
They're elite.
to the other people.
Capability gives you the post-war American dream.
It gives you that sort of stable job.
It's what allows you then also to be careful at your money and not to overspend and
the stay in shape and they care about like, okay, I want to make sure that I do things
with my kids.
The school's not working for it.
And I'll make the change so that like things are okay.
We deal with you.
All of these things that are necessary for this like, hey, we just sort of have a good,
rich life is built on a foundation of capability.
What Jin Z sometimes refers to sort of derogatorily as adulting.
I call it capability.
You build up those abilities.
This is boring stuff technically, right?
It's time management systems, it's productivity systems, a strategic plans.
It's having an explicit workload management system.
It's all the stuff I talk about in books like deep work and slow productivity.
But it matters.
I don't know why I put a slash there.
Oh, geez.
Capability.
All right.
People who are listening, what you're missing is just capable.
But Cape a bit.
I don't know what I'm right in here, Jesse.
Cape a bill.
You should hire me if you need like a fancy sign.
I'll just freehand it for you.
All right, boom.
There we go.
So here's what I mean about this.
Like I don't want to get too much in the weeds here of exactly what these models are or exactly what is required.
But my point is you got to get more systematic here.
What do you mean by success?
When you say you want to avoid mediocrity,
what does that mean to you?
And then you've got to get specific.
What is really required to get there?
Sometimes it's like be ready to grind if you're at a big tin law firm or you just got, you know, funding from Andrews and Horowitz.
Like, we want our return on your weird Web3 idea.
But for most people and most models, this sort of like, I'm just going to stay up real late and burn it and be pretend like I'm in, you know, like the West Wing and have all these calls and emails and slack and I'm going to drink Red Ball all day.
like, you know, that's not going to short term, it doesn't, you know, whatever, but that's not what it's going to matter in the long term for your definition of success. So it does really matter.
So let's, let's, let's wrap this up. Let me read again that key quote from Barr's piece, the quote that sort of gave us some uneasiness.
I'm not suggesting that everyone eliminate work life balance, but rather arguing that for ambitious young people who want to build wealth, traditional balance is a trap that will keep you comfortably mediocre.
All right. So in the final accounting was Bob.
I think at this case, Barr was asking the right question, but his answer was too narrow.
You need to get specific about what you mean by success, and then you need to learn specific
strategies to reach that specific definition.
Barr's mistake was to think that all definitions of success require these performative 15-hour
days and hustle, but they don't.
In fact, the definitions of success that do require that type of hustle are very narrow and they're
open to only a very small number of people and most people could care less about them.
Most definitions of success by contrast don't actually require wrecking your health or your social
relations.
But here's the thing.
As we just saw, these other definitions of success aren't necessarily easy either.
They require hard work and focus work.
It's not all the hours of the day.
So why are we talking about this topic on this particular show, right?
Well, look, in my roles as a computer scientist and a digital ethicist, I talk a lot about
technology's impacts on our lives and how we should react to these changes.
And one of the most common vectors that new technologies use to colonize your life
to keep you zonked out in video games or social media,
to keep you doing mindless streaming or stewing in nihilism and outrage,
is to take advantage of aimlessness.
When you're working actively towards the definition of the deep life,
something that's compelling to you, suddenly TikTok and
call of duty doesn't seem that attractive and rage bait on YouTube starts to look childish.
But when you're instead drifting aimlessly through your life, especially when you're young,
you become a target for these technologies.
If you don't get in the game, the tech companies will play your turn for you.
So my real fear about Emil Barr is not that he's going to trick a bunch of 22-year-olds into
giving up their sleep and working 100-hour work weeks.
Right?
Most people see through that bravado.
My real fear.
My real fear instead is that people will look to bar and be so turned off by the idea of work,
oh, is this what it means to be successful in work, that they throw up their hands and give in the nihilism.
And then the technologies can creep in and ossify them in that position of aimlessness.
So you can go ahead and ignore Emil Barr, but we have to keep his underlying claim in mind.
Creating a deep life does require hard work.
It's just not the simplistic, performative type of hard work that bar.
talked about.
So there we go.
It may seem like a non-technology-related issue, Jesse, but kind of is.
It's like people like that make you anti-work.
And when you're anti-work, you don't have focus.
Well, you don't have focus.
That's when, you know, TikTok kind of crawls in.
It's like, hey, look at me.
There's something interesting going on here.
Also, Barr kind of looks like a 16-year-old bond villain in some of the videos I found.
So it doesn't help.
There's a video where he had a mock turtleneck in a,
blazer and was holding a cat like blowfeld from a bond movie but like he looks like he's 16 years old
so i was like that's not that's not helping your cause not helping your cause um so there we go
how do you go about playing with the word capability for the section in the book so i'm working on
this notion of a crash course in becoming a more capable human so the idea is you know the
books about the deep life. How do you really create a brief life? We use lifestyle-centric planning.
We talk a lot about that on the show. But a lot of people, I've discovered this on the show,
a lot of people, when it comes time to do lifestyle-centric planning that transform their life
and the something cool to follow one of these like definitions of success, what they realize is I don't
even know how to get started. Like I don't, I don't trust myself to even like do the basic work
of transformation or I'm in a place where I'm feeling so stuck. I can't even imagine what a more
deeper life would even look like.
And the issue there I've come to realize is just lack of basic capability.
So to be capable means you kind of have your act together in the basic ways.
You have some control over your time.
You have some control over your mind.
You have sort of a basic reserve of discipline.
I can do a hard thing even if it's optional knowing that there's a longer term goal that
this is going to give me, right?
It's these type of basic level capability that allows you to have confidence.
Oh, I can do stuff.
Oh, lifestyle planning.
Let me give that a try.
That's the type of thing I could and maybe make progress.
on, right? And so I'm
toying with a structure of the book where you learn all the
ideas of the deep life. And then
I have this four-month crash course,
basically off of that really popular video
of ours. Four months, two things
per month, do these things. You'll come on the other side
recharge. And then you can get back to lifestyle
centric planning if you're struggling. So, I'm just
realizing these things kind of
they all intertwine. It's all complicated. That's why like
simple op-eds. I can't complain, though. I
wrote op-eds in my 20s for major papers
that also had like declarations about
I've done this and this and this.
I've got to be careful about the pot calling the kettle black here a little bit.
So there we go.
All right, we got some good questions.
Also, it's the first episode of a new month.
So we have the books I read in August coming up.
But first, we have to get to what you all came here for, which was a word about our sponsors.
All right, so Jesse, I got to tell you about the newest thing I'm obsessed with.
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And it's small enough.
I can put it in my pocket.
I don't have my, I had one of those George Costanza wallets.
Remember that where he got like back?
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or my wife would have to carry in her bag which he didn't wasn't very happy about this just fits
in my pocket and I have all my cards and IDs in there I mean this is a game changer I'm really
happy about it this is a true story Tuesday we're recording us on a Friday Tuesday I went out the
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That's what I thought.
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What's it called?
Something like that.
Pretty much.
Yeah, you get a Lamborghini
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All right, Jesse, let's do some questions.
First questions from Joel.
My work requires me to get a text message through Microsoft Authenticator multiple times per day.
This has me on the phone more than I want.
How should I deal with the distraction to always look at my text messages?
Interestingly, as part of his employment with me, but Jesse has required once every three minutes to call me on a landline to sort of check in his, the give me his 20.
He has to say this is a big bird over my 20 is and he has to give me the 20.
I got to keep an eye on my people I work with.
Okay, well, it's kind of terrible that you have to answer these text messages throughout the day.
I don't buy, however, that this means you must now go into all of your text communication multiple times a day if you don't want to.
So you got three things you can do here.
One, don't look at the other text messages when you get the Microsoft authenticator text.
Just you see things come up and you say, I don't care.
This is when I do my text messages.
This is not one of those times.
I will just pretend I didn't see that.
That might seem impossible.
Practice it for a few days.
It won't be so bad.
Two, if you're really not sure about your capability to do that, you can set up a custom
do not disturb mode that allows messages from that particular.
number to come through and not others, and you just put it in that mode and only those
messages will come through. Or I bet if you talk to IT, there's other factors to use in this two-factor
authentication. They say, yeah, that's the default, but we can do other ways. It can call or like an
email. And you could find another way to do it. Just say, I don't want to do text messages.
80% chance there, they'll hook you up with something else. So do not use this.
Kind of looks like you're angling for this answer. Do not use this as an excuse to like, I guess I just
have to, like, be involved in text messages all day.
You can get around that.
All right, who we got?
Next up is Emily.
How did your experiment with summer schedules work out?
And what is your, what are you planning for your teaching schedule?
So something I'm really trying to semester, Emily, and we'll see, we'll see how it goes.
I have not been in recent years as, I guess, going to try to be accommodating.
I have not been as firm as I should be with just these are my deep work hours and I do deep work.
And that's just that, right?
And a lot of people will be annoyed.
And that's just what it is.
I mean, I'm the guy who wrote the book Deep Work.
So you can't say you weren't warned.
I'm trying to hold a line on that this year.
First thing in the morning, I do my deep work hours.
There are two exceptions I have to work around.
Our faculty meetings are once a month, but they're held in the morning on Fridays.
But I've worked it out that I can get up and start writing right away and make it to the faculty meeting having
got in like a reasonable deep work block so I don't have to break that chain.
So now I'm really down to just the end of semester school events for my kids because they
often hold those right after school starts.
So parents can come in and do that before work.
That makes it impossible.
Obviously, I want to be at those.
But if I'm down to just those when I have like a presentation of my kid at school is the
only time I don't start with deep work, I'm going to be happy.
So I'm going to try to hold the line on that.
I've been the problem is by the time I made that decision, I already had
a non-trivial number of things scheduled in the morning for the next month or so.
So I'm holding the line now, but it might not be for another few weeks until I'm in a
territory where that's being preserved.
The other thing is I'm trying to do what I call a studio day, where I dedicate an entire
day the same day every week just to doing the stuff related to the outreach to the public.
So working on podcast scripts, writing my newsletter, any of the sort of stuff that
that surrounds that. Instead of making that ad hoc, have a day, and I've announced this. I've
told, like, my department chair, like, I have a studio day. This is part of my job as a digital ethicist
and in the Center for Digital Ethics, to do outreach about technology and its impacts.
There's a day where the office I'm working out of is my office here in Tacoma Park where my studio is,
and I don't schedule any other meetings on this day. And that I'm trying, but as Jesse knows,
I've been struggling with this because as soon as I declared that, I already had for the next
couple of months, stuff that fell on every day.
So again, it won't be until October, until any of this becomes steady.
And I might actually have to change what that day is.
This is another conversation, Jesse, but I might have to change.
It's hard stuff.
So, no, Emily, I'm working on it.
But my resolution this fall is I'm just going to be more annoying about it.
This is just my thing.
And then, you know, here's the thing.
I get chirped at so much now by so many people from so many different walks of life from
like national level commentators to just random people that we know to random strangers.
I'm kind of used to it now.
So this is what I want to do.
I want to make sure that I'm writing every single day and that the outreach part of the
media company gets a full day of my attention.
That's just my standard and they'll make everything else fit.
And if it doesn't fit, then I'll reduce it.
So that's what I'm practicing this year is, and I'll report back how it's going,
is just I'm going to hold the line more.
And again, it's easy to say and then be really accommodating and then the whole thing
falls apart.
I'm actually going to be less accommodating.
So.
But for the summer, you just, you wrote all the time.
Yeah, I just wrote all the time.
So that worked out well?
That worked out fine.
Yeah, we travel.
We go up north and the writing didn't go well, but the schedule went well.
Yeah, yeah.
So the schedule was fine.
So in the summer, it's great.
I just write every day for the first half of the day.
And we just built a whole summer around that.
But realistically now you're on schedule to where you hope to be like going into the summer, right with your writing?
It's complicated.
I'm reworking some things.
we'll get there.
I mean, you wrote a lot of New Yorker articles.
I wrote some New Yorker articles.
Oh, yeah, I was doing a lot of stuff.
I'm never not writing.
It's like we talked about in the deep dive.
I'm never not writing.
The newsletter's looking great.
I want to, yeah, you know, and shout out to.
So we have weekly newsletter.
Shout out the Nate for the he handles all the formatting and it actually looks, you know, professional.
So I think all that's good.
But I want more of the summer flavor in my regular year.
I can't write as much, obviously.
I have more obligations, but I want to write every day.
And then what about deep work for?
like research. Is that like in the afternoon?
Well, it depends what we're talking about for research.
So the things I'm working on in my writing blocks in the morning is it's like books and articles.
And so if I'm doing research for a book chapter or an article, that can happen during that time.
Like this week, I was, you know, I spent one of the writing blocks just finding sources and then the next two blocks like working on writing about it.
All of the other type of stuff I'm working on.
Yeah, afternoon.
And by afternoon, I mean, sometimes I can get this block in.
I'm done by 930.
So it might just be like a normal workday is kind of starting, right?
If I need to start early, I'll start early.
But I'm getting the, I'm getting the hours.
Yeah.
And I'm using the old meta productivity trick of fixed scale of productivity.
These are my hours.
This is when I deep work.
These are the studio days.
Everything else fits in.
And if I'm not getting to this, then I'm not getting to this.
Something has to give.
So that's something I'm tuning myself into more.
this semester.
All right, who we got?
Next up is Larry.
I went back to episode one where you introduced the idea of the deep life.
It's been almost five years since that episode aired, and I'm curious, what did your ideal
lifestyle look like back then?
How has it evolved since, and what changes do you make to where you are today?
Does some of this get answered in your upcoming book?
Yeah, it's an interesting question.
I haven't gone back and listened to that episode in a while because the, the, the, the, the, the,
wasn't great and the audio is a little live.
So where I recorded that first episode, this would have been late spring.
It was like May 2020.
Right in the middle of COVID.
Right in the middle of COVID.
And the county we live in in Maryland, Montgomery County was all in like if you even open
your blinds, you probably should go to Guantanamo.
Like it was very much like just locked down and everyone was trying to out.
lock down each other to like I don't I guess signal their worthiness or whatever so like this is this is terrible right so we we rented a house down in southern Maryland or no one cares about anything like it's just it's empty whatever it's not like we were there all the time it was like we temporarily had a second house we could go down to and it was a weird piece of property because it was like a just a modest house and then not making this up
an air strip.
It's like a runway, but it was all grass, but like cut out of the trees runway.
So really long.
And at the end of the runway, it was on water.
And there's a fire pit down there and there's like water.
And they had golf carts because it was so far away.
So he would ride the golf carts down to the end of this runway and there was like water down there.
It was we just win.
We just spend more and more time at this crazy property.
So we've got to have space and be outside.
And they opened up stuff there like way sooner so I could go back to like museums and stuff.
We've talked about this before, but I went to five museums in like three weeks when they opened off again.
And, you know, that's where I recorded the first episode on a table in that house, a hard table on a hard floor.
So, that's what I was trying to get to.
Live meaning echoey.
So that's why I haven't listened to it.
I will say in the pandemic is when I set like a lot of the pieces that became part of my ideal lifestyle vision that I had made huge progress on but continue to pursue.
A lot of those pieces came down in the pandemic.
So that was definitely a face shift point in like whatever my my ideal lifestyle vision was.
I'm sure pre-pandemic it was much more, I don't remember exactly all the pieces of it.
It was much more just, you know, functional.
I just moving forward to my academic career, having a book that was successful.
I had a family still relatively young back then.
We had just moved.
Like my books were just starting to take off.
So I'm sure it was just, I don't know.
It was a little bit more prosaic.
And then I got a little bit more interesting during the pandemic.
Even doing the podcast itself came from driving that golf cart back and forth listening
to mainly the Rwatchables podcast with Bill Simmons and just like hearing what they were doing.
I was like, oh, this is interesting, like what people are up to in this medium and trying
to like imagine what it could be.
I read a bunch of Disney books during that period.
I still, as we'll see at the end of this episode, I'm still reading a lot of Disney books.
But I was reading a lot of Disney books back then that during the, during the
early pandemic is when my that weird obsession and and I began thinking about the the media side of what I do and a lot of ideas that now we see today and, you know, the Deep Work HQ and the and the podcast, the video and the newsletters and the way things are progressing now and the footprint it has in my life and in my career. Like a lot of those seeds were planted back early pandemic.
Um, thinking about like what I wanted to do with my books and what I wanted, uh, the work to shallow ratio, the shape of my career.
This is when I begin to change beyond just the simple path of just you're a computer science professor who goes to these conferences and publishes these papers and has these students.
That's when I first started shifting towards a more ambitious and idiosyncratic vision for my academic impact.
So without getting into too much details, a lot changed right around the time I did that podcast, early pandemic.
And I made a lot of progress actually on a lot of those ideas that came up then.
So still going well.
All right, who do we got?
Next up is Kerry.
I have enough time at my morning hours to focus on deep work and projects that matter to my work.
I also get the inbox zero most days.
However, I want to start using my afternoons for other pursuits.
My problem is that I obsessively check my inbox for new emails.
Well, you do that because you worry about bad things that could happen.
And so when you do that type of obsessive checking, you worry about bad things that are happening.
But when you're actually doing the checking, what you're looking for,
is the positive feeling of relief when you see nothing is there.
So your mind is like, what if there's something there?
What if there's something urgent?
You know, like, do we need to do something?
And you're like, you know what?
If I check and there's not, I'm going to feel good.
And I kind of want that good feeling.
You can get addicted to that positive feeling in the same way you can get addicted to
the positive feeling of, you know, eating a donut or smoking a cigarette.
It really can be powerful.
So we have to break you out of that cycle.
And the way I often suggest in these situations that people do that,
is commit for one to two weeks saying, I am going to make lots of bad things happen.
Even if things go terribly awry, I can always apologize my way out of like one week.
I could be like, sorry, like it was a hard week.
I wasn't feeling well or whatever.
But for one week, I'm not going to try to convince myself that nothing bad will happen if I don't check my inbox in the afternoon.
I'm going to say let the bad things happen.
I want to see how many bad things happen if I don't do that.
my new rule is going to be do an emergency check at 430 just to make sure there's nothing really urgent
if there is you can like give your quick apology like I'm on and I'll get to it tomorrow so people
aren't stressed out the end of the day and that's it and be like I'm sure bad things will happen
people will be upset things will get missed but it's not going to jeopardize my job because
it's one week and I can be like hey it was a hard week so make that commitment your mind
will be on board with that if you try to convince your mind it's fine nothing bad will happen
And it's like, I don't believe you.
That is a wrong thing.
And because that's a wrong thing, I am not going to base my activities on it.
But if you're like, no, no, no, bad things will happen, but we won't get fired for it because it's just one week.
Your mind's like, okay, fine, this is a stupid exercise, but we'll do it.
And here's what you'll find.
Bad things don't happen.
Because no one really cares.
And if you're on the ball and you're responsible and you can touch base at 430 when you need to,
when people send you a message, it's off their head.
It's off their plate.
Like, great.
There's one less thing I have to stress about.
And I'm going to pay attention to the next 500 things.
It is not as people imagine, when they see an email sitting there in their inbox and it's like 430 and it's been there since like 1 p.m.
What they imagine is that that sender since 1 p.m. has been sitting there staring at their inbox, slowly pouring slugs of bourbon, gripping the glass as it shakes and being like, where the hell is your answer and slug back?
slam it down and then looking at the clock and there's like a wildly ticking second hand behind
them and another half hour goes by and they pour another slug.
It's been 30 minutes.
So you imagine that's what's happening that everyone is just sitting there like, I cannot believe
this guy has not answered my message.
I am probably going to have to dismember him with an axe because like this is unconscionable.
No, they have a thousand messages.
They're just glad they got this one thing off their plate.
They don't want you to answer right away because then it's back on their plate again.
So it's like, great.
Well, let all the terrible things happen.
Oh, my God, it's going to be so terrible.
And then it won't be.
And then you're my own.
Like, okay, fine.
You're right.
This is okay.
And then you'll stop worrying about it as much.
Then the relief you get from checking will be less.
And if the relief is less, the positive signal is no longer so salient.
And then the addictive loop will degrade.
So just tell yourself, yeah, mind, let's just see how many bad things do happen and then see what really happens.
So much of problems with work communication, Jesse, is what we imagine other people are doing in terms of tracking our behavior.
It's kind of amazing.
They really think that there's a war room where everyone is sitting there with like real-time graphs.
It's like the Apollo Mission Control from Apollo 13, except for it's like graphs of your inbox.
You know, like they check in on all the people and the control stations at mission control.
Like, telemetry, go, you know, whatever.
Life support, go.
That you have everyone that's like response time, go.
Number of committees they agree to.
Go.
Like, they're all sitting here with these charts, like trying to figure out what's going.
No one cares.
Be reliable.
Get your stuff done.
No one's charting.
your email response times.
And if they are, you know, get out that job.
That's stupid.
All right.
Who do we got?
Next up is Maureen.
Can you summarize how values and strategic planning documents,
birthday projects, and lifestyle-centric planning combined together?
Nobody knows.
Just leave it at that.
It's just the way it is.
No one knows how they fit together.
We just accept it.
Yes.
All right.
This is like a Cal Newport, Popery.
All right, let's put these, let me go through these all here.
Okay, so lifestyle-centric planning is an approach to transforming your life in which you work systematically towards a holistic picture of a better lifestyle as opposed to assuming that one radical change or accomplishment will make everything better.
So it is an approach that transforming your life.
Your values, having a clear description of your values in a values document can help you when creating your ideal lifestyle that you're not.
you're moving towards.
It also just helps you day to day and trying to figure out, like, how do I react
to particular situations as they come up?
It's a good reminder.
Your strategic plan is a tool you use to move closer to your ideal lifestyle, among other
things.
So that might be useful towards that.
As I, you know, how do I make sure I'm making progress on these various things?
It moves me closer to my ideal lifestyle.
Your birthday plan, that just means check in on all this on your birthday to make sure that
you don't fall into stasis.
Hey, let me look back at my ideal lifestyle.
Do I like this vision?
Do I need to change anything?
How do I want to change my approach?
my plan for this year to move closer.
So I think that covers it all.
Strategic planning,
birthday projects,
I'll listen to planning and values.
There you go.
In my new book,
which right now it feels like it'll come out in 2035,
but now I'm making progress on it.
It will come out on time.
In my new book,
I get into some of this.
So you'll definitely get into
lifestyle-centric planning.
Why, that's the better way to do it,
as opposed to hoping for one radical change.
How do you build these lifestyle plans?
How do you figure out what even matters?
to you. How do you write a good ideal lifestyle plan? Like, what's the process? How do you go from, like, your notes with your intuitions about what resonates to, like, an actually usefully formatted plan? How do you then build a plan to systematically move closer to that vision? Right? Because I'm all about it's idiosyncratic. And it's making very careful, like, if I do this, it could help four things at the same time. Then if I combine it with this, it'll prevent this from backsliding. It's more of a puzzle than it is a key. That's a big, big argument in my book.
changing your life is sometimes fitting together the puzzle pieces of your obstacles and opportunity, not finding the one key that unlocks everything.
It's not as dramatic as that.
So we'll get into that as well, as well as like the advanced techniques that you throw in to sort of help make that progress.
So that's where we might hear about like birthday plans and values documents, et cetera.
And then another big part of that book will be like, wait, but what if all of this is just, you know, like I can't even do any of this?
Crash course and capability.
And maybe you want to do that.
And I imagine that being something that you do throughout life.
Like, I have a hard period.
I got knocked on my, you know, knocked on my butt a bunch this quarter, life, work, or whatever.
I need to kind of re-get the engine of capability going here, crash course.
Or maybe you've never gotten there.
You're 27.
And it was like straight from college to video games.
You know, like, I got to just get started, you know, crash course, right?
Or you really have your act together, but then you went into a new phase of life.
Management position started a family or something.
Oh, my God, bought a house.
You're like, I don't know how to, like, keep the walls up.
Crash course.
So these are the pieces I'm working with.
I'm working with now.
All right.
Who do?
Is that our last question?
All right.
So we have, do we have a call this week?
Yeah, we have a case study.
All right.
Which one should we do first?
Just you can choose.
Do the case study first?
Do we have our fabled case study music?
I think we do.
All right.
Do I read it?
Is it a one-time music or do I read with it in the background?
Pretty brave.
I see.
That'd be funny if the case, after that music, the case study started with, well, yesterday I killed a man.
Ryan knew from prison.
Must be nice.
How do I do deep work when I'm in prison for killing a man?
We need different music for that.
I like that music.
We'll play it again at the end.
It makes it kind of talked over it.
All right.
Today's case study.
I like this one from Nick.
It's about household admin, which is something I've been working a lot on recently.
Nick said, I started using your idea of using a male sorter to organize.
to organize household admin.
When I first heard this mentioned on the podcast,
I was drowning in household admin work.
The concept of a mail sorter really clicked with me,
so I immediately put a cardboard box on the kitchen counter
with all my pending paperwork in it.
I also told my wife, if she had any paperwork for me to handle,
she could just dump it in that box as well.
This instantly made both of our lives a lot easier.
For the first few weeks, I was still in the habit of handling admin stuff as it came in,
so it was easy to slip back into the habit of following up on the stuff every night.
But over time, as I built up the routine of checking the mail sort of weekly, I started to trust the system and I got to the place where I could rely on it.
After a month or two of using the cardboard box, I decided it was time to over-engineer a more permanent solution.
What I came up with was a real mailbox, the style that goes on a wall with a lid on the top, and I mounted it on the kitchen wall with two magnets.
This frees up space on the kitchen counter and keeps all the housework paperwork out of sight.
It's just a right size to hold a week or two of paperwork.
And with the magnets, it's really convenient to pull off the wall when it's time to process.
For a long time, I had a weekly reminder of my calendar to process the mail sorter.
However, the system is working so well that I recently reduced a frequency to every other week.
So using a mail sorter to manage my paperwork has dramatically reduced my household admin burden.
And keeping that in check is an important piece of my journey towards the deep life.
Nick, fantastic case study.
Having a place where stuff goes where you trust that you're going to get to it is a David Allen idea.
is like the best stress-reducing drug you can find.
Because your mind doesn't worry about it.
It's in that box, and I look at that box on Fridays,
and I trust them to look at that box on Fridays,
and so if I put the thing in the box, it'll be seen on Friday.
And what you're gaining here, it's not a time thing.
It's what people get wrong about time management or productivity.
It's not a time thing.
It's not I got the total minutes dedicated to paperwork is smaller.
It's not the game.
The game is a psychological relief game.
You don't have to worry about it.
It's all in one place.
And then you can get it done all at once.
And it might not be faster, but it is cognitively more pleasant because, as we've also
talked about on the show, when you do a big batch of, let's say, household paperwork,
you can transform your mind into the cognitive context of household paperwork and then do
all of these things in that context.
And once you're in the context, these things are much easier to do from just a psychological
effort required perspective.
Whereas if you take these same household admin things and do them in an ad hoc on-demand
pattern, just in the middle of something else, oh, let me do this now.
You're never in the right cognitive mindset.
So it's like pulling cognitive teeth, right?
You're like, oh, God, I got to do this paperwork, but I was just thinking about this thing I was
doing over here.
And it constantly creates friction and it constantly creates sort of mental strain.
So it feels better to do it that way as well.
So I think that is a great example.
And the key is trust.
Yeah, put the weekly calendar thing.
You're never going to forget it, but it gives you peace at first.
It's like, oh, my calendar will remind me to check this.
You'll remember.
But it just gives you peace to know that like it's on my calendar.
I won't forget it.
So I think that's a, that's a fantastic way to do it.
When we bought our first house, it was like kind of my job because my wife would go to work early.
I'd have the first shift with the kids.
And so I just had this mail sorter and a 30 minute block every morning right after the nanny came.
I think is how I did it before I'd kind of get started with Georgetown work.
And it was like just do house because there's so much household stuff to do when you buy a new house.
Like I don't have this.
This.
This.
The water bill is not working.
right or we need this type of insurance that we didn't have before or like there's you know snakes in the
faucets it's always something right and so it's like i just every day for 30 minutes i work on the
stuff and when stuff came in i just put it in there and man i was just on top of it so that works
trusted systems do work could we play the music to the place out here i enjoyed it all right
we got a call we do now let's hear it hello my name is dave curlin i'm a real estate salesperson
My question is in regard to the capture and review parts of your productivity system.
I know you use Trello, and I personally have adopted using it myself, but as a number of
Trello cards get bigger and bigger, the list gets longer.
I find it difficult to effectively look at them and make decisions about what to do and not to do.
You have alluded to David Allen's system in the past, and I'm familiar with his method of capturing
things in context categories.
Is there a reason you don't create more columns in Trello and use the
method, it seems like it would be a more efficient way to review these tasks, et cetera,
when doing daily and weekly planning and dealing with a really big list of possible activities
and projects.
Love your podcast.
It's been so helpful.
And the time blocking method has helped me immensely.
Thanks.
Well, for my professional task when organized in Trello, I do have many columns.
I also have many boards.
You need to organize information in various,
scales of context helps you make better use of it, right? So I tend in the professional context
to have a board for each major role. So I'm director of undergraduate studies for the
computer science department. That's a different role than say a role working in like the
Center for Digital Ethics or my role working as like an algorithm researcher. So give them a
separate board. I only want to see things related to a given role at one time. And so when I
want to service that role, that's what I'm doing this afternoon. Then let me just.
just see those things. And then within those boards, I have a lot of columns.
And there's like classic columns, like makes sense of. I haven't processed it yet. There's like sort of urgent working on this week.
But I have a lot of like waiting to hear back from is in there. I sent an email to someone. I'm waiting to hear back.
Let me remind myself of what that is and what I'm going to do when I hear back to discuss that next meeting for like any regular meetings in my life assigned for that role. I'll have a column.
Right. So my director of undergraduate studies, there's, I have meetings with my associate director every week. And then every other week I meet.
with my department chair.
I keep track of, for both of those things,
things I want to talk about at that next meeting.
That saves me a ton of email, by the way.
So instead of like just sending the people's instinct is as soon as I think of something,
let me email my department chair.
Hey, it's off my hands.
But now you've just added another email to the thousand that she's going to get.
And she responds.
And now, like, you have to work this out, not at the time you want to,
but whenever these emails move back and forth.
So instead you put on a card, talk at next meeting.
When you get to the meeting, you go through them all.
It gives you relief.
You can have columns for like particular projects that are going on.
If it's like this is like a time sensitive, complicated project that I, you know, we're trying to get this conference together.
Great.
Here's a separate column over here so I can just keep track of those things.
So create as many columns as you need and create different boards for different contexts.
I think all of this helps.
So lots of things together that have unrelated contexts.
You all have to look at the same time.
That can be really overwhelming.
So I'm not sure where you got the idea that I have a very small number of total columns I use.
I have a ton in my in my trolley universe.
All right, we got our final segment coming up, the books I read in August,
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All right, Jesse, let's go to our final segment.
So like I like to do, our first episode of each month, talk about the books I read in the previous month.
We should get theme music for this, Jesse.
Yeah, we should.
That's a good idea.
It's only once a month.
I think it would be funny if it was something that, like, made no sense.
Like, it was really incongruous.
and we just don't mention it.
It's going to be funny.
Like, girls just want to have fun.
What would be the craziest thing?
La Bamba.
It'd be great.
So we're going to do that next time.
We're going to have incongruous theme music.
And we're just going to roll with it.
That's what we do.
All right.
So in August, it's a weird month.
I'm looking at my books here.
I was on vacation in August for a lot of it.
So I was reading.
I was on vacation.
vacation. I was writing a lot. I was struggling with my writing. I didn't want to read. It's an
interesting set of books. Let's just say, Judge. That's what I'm trying to say. These are,
these are the books that someone odd like me reads when on vacation and it's just like I'm not
interested in, like, hard new ideas right now. So let's just keep this in mind. This is a summer list.
All right. This first book, I don't know how to even explain this book. It's called Boundless
Realm by Fox Nolte. It is a book, I think it's regularly published, maybe it's self-published.
I write on Kindle.
It is a book about the haunted mansion ride at Disney World, not the Disneyland version, but the Disney World.
But it's the craziest book, Jesse, because it's not, here's a history of the ride.
It is, here's a history of the haunted house and the American Gothic imagination.
Let's start there.
All right.
Now we're going to have like a history of like, it's like cultural trends that surround the very notion of like haunted spaces.
Now let's get a whole history of the dark room attractions, starting in these like small amusement park attractions where it would literally just be a dark room that you're on a track and then how things were added.
It's like strands of sociology and history all wind together.
And then it's like a beat by beat examination of this ride.
And it goes like on each section, it kind of like goes deep and like what's there and how it's represented.
the artistic cultural impact, but also like historically speaking, like when something got changed.
And at this year they came, I mean, it's the craziest thing.
It's like the level of detail you would write if you were writing about like a presidential assassination, like that level of research.
But about this right.
And it was fascinating.
And he has another one out.
I think he writes a bunch of these books.
So I don't know.
The labor of love.
How long is it right?
Like five minutes?
I was on it like 30 years ago.
Yeah.
Yeah.
It's like five minutes.
And I've only been on the one at this.
I went to Disneyland this summer, and that's the only one anytime I've ever been to any Disney.
This is about the Disney World one, which is a little bit different.
And you find out exactly how it's different.
Trust me, you get into it.
It's a cool.
I mean, I think it's a cool ride.
I did it a bunch of times.
I was just like a, I was reading that one up in Vermont.
Interesting book.
All right.
Then I read Collisions by Alec and Navala Lee.
Oh, this is a legitimate book.
This is a, it's a biography of a physicist.
who named Alvarez.
And he was involved in the Manhattan Project.
So he designed the instrument that the chase plane that chase, like so, so, you know, there's the Anola Gay dropping the atomic bomb, but there was, you have like a couple planes with you.
And one of the other planes dropped a piece of equipment on a parachute to try to measure the blast and other things and then like radio it back.
And so he was up in the chase plane because he designed this thing.
He went on to win a Nobel Prize for his.
He was a sort of experimentalist physicist, big famous physicist.
He won a Nobel Prize for his work on something, I don't know, cloud chambers or particle something, something.
So he's kind of an interesting guy.
Like what made the book interesting is that his life went in, he got involved in like a lot of weird or interesting different projects.
So that he was heavily involved, not heavily involved, but he got involved in Kennedy assassination debunking.
So debunking the conspiracy theories.
about the Kennedy assassination from a physics perspective.
Like he did a lot of work on using rules of physics to understand things like the timing of the shots and the like how a head could go backwards if it was shot in this direction.
So he got really involved in that.
And then most famously later in life, working with his son who was a geologist or something like this, they were the ones who advanced the asteroid killing the dinosaurs theory.
So this was there working together really made this argument based off of the eridium and the KT layer.
They really began the, they pushed the argument, which, you know, we grew up with it.
You and I, like, yeah, the dinosaurs were killed by an asteroid.
What I don't think we realized growing up, that was a brand new theory when we were growing up.
Like in the early 90s, late 80s, that was still being debated.
So, like, we grew up and they're like, yeah, like the asteroid killed the dinosaurs.
That wasn't like, yeah, we've known this since the 1950s.
In the 90s still, they were like actively making this argument.
So, you know, so that was cool.
So that was interesting.
It was interesting to hear about him.
Alvarez, interesting guy, did a lot of deep work.
Also, I'm trying this off.
I lost my list here.
Let me go back.
Then I read, it's another Disney book, Jesse.
I was on vacation.
This is the mindset I was in.
I was reducing my stress.
I got really into people writing ridiculously detailed books about a very narrow thing involving Disney.
So this is a similar.
This is a more legitimate book.
No, Foxx Notte is a legitimate book, too.
I just don't know if it's, like, traditionally published or not.
This one was called Before the Bird Sing by Kin Bruce.
Ken Bruce is an animator, director, like a Hollywood guy.
And it's all about the enchanted Tiki room in Disneyland.
one and because that was like the first animatronics there was the Lincoln animatronic but it was really like sort of the first sort of audio animatronics in Disney and it's the whole history of the technology the room like beat by beat how this came together this this this author kin Bruce was like deep in the Disney archives you got access to him so he's like looking at annotations on notes about like oh they moved like the tables around for this or that it's like again it's a micro-historialial
of this one ride, which, by the way, I've never seen.
It was closed when I was at Disneyland.
So I don't know anything.
But I'm interested in audio animatronics.
And so you just get this like really, really deep history, including like why was it
the Tiki Room.
So you get a whole history about the Tiki craze and about the South Pacific really coming
to the attention of like the American people.
And there was this craze of all these like over the top themed Tiki restaurants in the first
half of the 20th century.
Like in Los Angeles, there's this one that the whole outside.
a volcano with like lava coming on.
You come into these Tiki restaurants and it would, they had like rainstorms inside
and volcanoes and giant tanks.
It was all really themed.
It was this whole mania.
So you have to understand that to understand like why is there a Tiki room at Disneyland.
Like it was really big.
And then it got even bigger after World War II because a lot of American GIs went to the South Pacific.
So then they came back and they had seen all this stuff and had these stories.
and Hawaii was just about to become the 49th U.S. state.
And so it was like this moment.
So you get like that history in it.
But then you get the whole history of audio animatronics,
which comes out of technology.
They purchased surplus technology that was used in the Polaris Nuclear Ballistic Missile Program.
Because like the way audio animatronics work, not to get too much in the detail here,
but it's how do we, in an age before we have digital computers.
How do we store, like, all the movements we want, like, one of a bird to do?
And not only store those movements, but sync it up exactly with, like, the sound we're going to be playing.
And in audio animatronics, they said, what we'll do is for each movement, we'll have, like, a tone.
And if we have a multi-track tape, we can fit a bunch of tones on here.
In fact, we can overlap some tones on the same tape because there are different frequency bands that are, they constructively, we can kind of furrier, transform them back out again.
Like we can store multiple frequency bands on the same channel and then still isolate both of them.
And so what they then had is so you're recording these tones on audio tape for all the different motions you want these valves opening and shutting to move things.
Then they had these things that Motorola had invented for their push-a-talk radios called tone reads.
So you have the sound that's kind of like wired.
It's going over an analog cable into these tone reads.
and it vibrates, different frequencies vibrate different reeds.
And when it vibrates, it closes a circuit.
And that circuit can then when it closes,
can open and close a valve to move something.
So the program for these birds was on an audio tape.
And this tape is playing,
and they have these huge banks of tone reeds
that are vibrating different frequencies
that are opening and closing valves.
And they could fit something like 128 or 200
different kind of subtracks of tones on there.
And it's exactly synchronized to the sound because one of the tracks is just like the sound.
So like it's exactly synchronized to it.
So they kind of invented that was, they were using this to control missiles.
And they used this for this.
But then for Pirates of the Caribbean, there's too many figures for this, right?
So Pirates of Caribbean, now we're talking like 62.
There's too many figures.
And they have audio tape and it's constant.
It's not like shows like they're constantly moving.
And they're like, we can't just constantly be playing this audio tape.
And there's too many figures to try to program.
So they went to something more.
simple there. It was each of the, and their motions were much simpler because you only
passed them briefly. So they made physical discs that have like bumps up and down. And when
the bump happens, like different valves open and close. And they just had like, you'd have these big
racks full of discs with bumps, like big records, really. And they would just turn and push a
stylus up and down. Or they would be holes and they would have a photo thing under it, but just
physical discs that would turn. And each one would have like, it would take two minutes.
to go around and that's like two minutes of activity.
So you would have a whole stack of these disks for all the different motors on one pirate.
And it was like a much more durable thing because it was really physical, right?
And then by like the 70s, you could just have zeros and ones on its computer, just loading the memory and the computer could just do it.
So like this type of stuff is really interesting to me.
My wife thought it was crazy.
It's like, what are you reading?
Actually, this book is a hardcover beautifully produced.
It's hard to get.
I had to order it, you know, not through Amazon, through some other means.
beautiful hardcover
embossed hard cloth
hardbound
you know with like
the kiki bird in
or this of that
self published as far as I can tell
it's the labor of love
really yeah
there's no publisher
I think this
Brad Bird
the director
wrote right the introduction
like this is the guy who wrote
it as like a real
Hollywood
and he's an animation insider
all right
then I read
a fun novel
which I got
in Bethany
there's a good bookstore
in Bethany
called Beach Reads
which they don't
carry my books
but they do have
beach reads.
A lot of novels
or this or that.
And I got a book
randomly off-the-shelf
impulse by
Desperation Reef
by T. Jefferson
Parker.
It's like a
procedural thriller
family,
their surfers.
There's like,
I don't know,
intrigue
and their criminal
syndicate like burns
down their restaurant
and it was fun.
Interesting.
And then finally
I read Shift by
Hugh Howie.
So I mentioned
my
one of my kids read the Hugh Howie trilogy,
which is the,
on Apple TV,
the series of Silo,
but he wrote the wool trilogy
back in the day.
That was big like last decade.
Anyways,
he read them and I promised to read along.
So I read the first one the month before.
And this month I read the second one shift.
And I guess I'll read the third one sometime soon.
There you go.
Those are my five books for August 2020-25.
If you know of any obscure Disney books that go way too deep on a very narrow topic,
I'm in, man.
Now you've got to just tell me.
I've got to read them all.
there's a whole world out there.
So let me know.
Send those recommendations or just send me the book to Jesse.
We're getting a lot of really narrow books.
I love the technology side of like the Disney Park stuff.
That's really what I'm kind of interested in.
This year, like that's my interest.
During the pandemic, I was really interested in like the media business brand of Disney.
Now this year, because it's like relaxing to me, I'm really interested in the technological side of Disney parks.
been the one.
One day, but what are you going to do?
All right.
That's all the time we have for today.
We'll be back next week with another episode.
Until then, as always, stay deep.
Hi, it's Cal here.
One more thing before you go.
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