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    <title>#beats posts — Ben Crowder</title>
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      <title>Beats</title>
      <link>https://bencrowder.net/blog/2021/beats/</link>
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      <pubDate>Sat, 06 Mar 2021 12:00:00 GMT</pubDate>
      <dc:creator><![CDATA[Ben Crowder]]></dc:creator>
      <description><![CDATA[<p>No, not the headphones. Or plotting. Less exciting than either, it’s a new productivity technique I’ve been using lately and oh my goodness it works well (for me).</p>
<p>Let’s rewind. My problem has been that I work on projects in several different areas (writing, art, coding, design, etc.) and would like to make progress across all of them, but in my mortal frailty I instead tend to spend most of my available project time on whatever is easiest.</p>
<p>A while back I read Andy Matuschak’s <a href="https://andymatuschak.org/2020/">reflections on 2020</a>. The “Executing alone” section talks about the costs of context switching, which gave me the idea to spend a week at a time working in any one area (or track, as I called them). A week on writing, a week on art, etc. Advantage: much less context switching than I’m used to. But it also meant long stretches of time between tracks (depending on how I rotated through the tracks), which wasn’t so great.</p>
<p>Next attempt: slicing time into days instead of weeks. I created a new calendar in Google Calendar to track my daily track assignments — one day for art, the next for writing, the next for working on tooling, etc. I also opted to give myself some flexibility to work on a track for more than one day in a row if I was on a roll. Better, definitely. But it didn’t stick. I don’t know why.</p>
<p>Finally, at long last, I found the right thing for me: the beat. The way I’m using it, it’s a flexible unit of time ranging from a minute or two up to however long is needed (so far ten or fifteen minutes). Even with a busy schedule, I almost always have a handful of free beats scattered throughout the day where I could get something small done — a next action, usually.</p>
<p>That’s all well and good, but the part that changed things for me was this: when I have an available beat, rather than having to decide in that moment what to work on, instead I just press a button. It’s a random decision. And it’s amazing (for me).</p>
<p>To get this working, I set up a list (in the iOS Shortcuts app) that has each thing I want to work on. The projects or tracks I want to work on more often are duplicated, so it ends up looking something like this (heavily redacted, ha):</p>
<ul>
<li>Writing — project 1</li>
<li>Writing — project 1</li>
<li>Writing — project 1</li>
<li>Writing — project 2</li>
<li>Writing — project 2</li>
<li>Writing — project 3</li>
<li>Art</li>
<li>Art</li>
<li>etc.</li>
</ul>
<p>The shortcut then uses a <code>Get Random Item from List</code> action followed by <code>Show alert: Item from List</code>. Super simple, took about thirty seconds to put together. I have it set up as a widget on my phone and as a complication on my watch, and I find that I use the latter the most by far.</p>
<p>I’m not sure why this works so well for my brain, but moving the choice out of my present and into my past (where I can prioritize better) has worked wonders — most notably for me, I’ve gotten unstuck on several projects I’d been avoiding for months.</p>
<p>Anyway, I have no idea whether it would work for other people, so if you try it out, let me know how it goes.</p><hr class="feed-extra" style="margin-top: 48pt;" /><p class="feed-extra feed-mail"><a href="mailto:ben.crowder@gmail.com?subject=Re%3A%20Beats">Reply via email</a></p>]]></description>
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