To me, the deep life is about focusing with energetic intention on things that really matter — in work, at home, and in your soul — and not wasting too much attention on things that don’t.
The problems I focused on in Deep Work, and in my writing since, have been getting steadily worse. In 2016 my main concern was helping people find enough free time for deep work. Today I think we’re rapidly losing the ability to think deeply at all.
Different people are wired for different ambition types.
Type 1 craves activity and feasts at the buffet of appealing opportunities that success creates.
Type 2 craves simplicity and autonomy, and sees success as a source of leverage to reduce stressful obligations.
A Type 1 personality stuck on a farm, quietly writing day after day, will quickly become bored.
A Type 2 personality working on a screenplay at the same time as two books while filling weeks with Hollywood meetings will be crushed with anxious unease.
Accomplishment is often best measured on the scale of years not days, and when you zoom out to this grander level, the advantages of a focused slowness become hard to ignore.
One of the core principles of my emerging philosophy of slow productivity is that busyness and exhaustion are often unrelated to the task of producing meaningful results.
Too many of us undervalue concentration, and substitute busyness for real productivity, and are quick to embrace whatever new techno-bauble shines brightest.
When work was done at work, and there was no chance of continuing your labors at home, your job didn’t seem nearly as onerous.
There’s a lot about early 2000s culture I’m not eager to excavate, but this idea of the constrained workday certainly seems worthy of nostalgia.
The happiest, most passionate employees are not those who followed their passion into a position, but instead those who have been around long enough to become good at what they do.
Cognitive work is a fragile endeavor; environment matters.
When we pass the laundry basket outside our home office (a.k.a. our bedroom), our brain shifts toward a household-chores context, even when we would like to maintain focus on our work.
Here's a reminder for the rest of us, nervous about slipping into digital oblivion.
What ultimately matters is the fundamental value of what we produce. Everything else is distraction.