The App Cleanse — 500ish Words — Medium
You may think you’ll miss that random app you downloaded seven months ago and have only used once, but you won’t. If you did, you could just download it again.
What we believe in.
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by Patrick Rhone, Master Generalist
The App Cleanse — 500ish Words — Medium
You may think you’ll miss that random app you downloaded seven months ago and have only used once, but you won’t. If you did, you could just download it again.
What we believe in.
Everything I need fits in my backpack | Jason Rehmus Can Be Social
Traveling light is all about being flexible and thinking just far enough ahead to be prepared for daily life. If I focus too far into the future, I’ll bury myself under burdens I don’t need to carry.
As stated, I love these “what I carry” travel posts but I like this one especially because Jason is my friend and I’m pretty proud of him.
Seth’s Blog: The tragedy of small expectations (and the trap of false dreams)
Expectations aren’t wishes, they’re part of a straightforward equation: This work plus that effort plus these bridges lead to a likelihood of that outcome. It’s a clear-eyed awareness of what’s possible combined with a community that shares your vision.
This is important. Read the whole thing.
Litenin is a very light and shockingly fast feed reader.
Litenin doesn’t display a feed item’s
description, which makes it a bit too light for me, but it’s well worth a look if you tend to use RSS to skim headlines, opening browser tabs as you go.
I, too, require something just a bit more heavy but I love the idea and execution. Feels a bit like the original Notational Velocity to me. That’s high praise.
Jac and I headed into Winnipeg this past weekend for the 500th time. We have each lived in Winnipeg for a few years and we have spent many hours roaming the stores in Polo Park and St. Vital. Yet, despite all the time spent there, we’ve never once toured downtown Winnipeg or ventured through The Forks as a tourist.
So we tried it this past weekend.
As is usual from Joshua, amazing photos. But I especially loved his “insider as outsider” take on his home. Its a nice approach to a travel log that I would love to see more of.
The Dalai Lama’s Daily Routine and Information Diet
And yet the Dalai Lama approaches his information diet like he does his meditation — as a deliberate practice. In that sense, “meaning diet” is far more accurate a term, for he is remarkably deliberate about which aspects of the Information Age to fold into his meaning-making mission and which to sidestep.
I am working on having a more Buddhist approach to my information production and consumption so this was enormously helpful.
How I Packed for a Three Month World Trip | Kiwimonk
I love stuff like this. Anyone who has followed me a while knows I love to pack light. Seeing stuff like this helps me think about how I might refine my game.
Because, who needs to pay attention to the law when you can just abide by your own secret ones?
The Strange Rise of the Writers’ Space – The New Yorker
A relatively new institution, the shared writers’ space, fills a niche so small that it isn’t covered in Saval’s book. At these urban oddities, members get access to a quiet room or two full of desks, often with an adjacent eat-in kitchen, perhaps a couch—in other words, an office. But without a boss. And you pay them, instead of the other way around.
Sign me up! I would love to have such a space in my city.
Stop putting the work aside that should be doing for the work you need to do. Yes there are things we need to do, but we should be smart enough to identify the work we need to do and schedule it in for the appropriate time in the future. It then becomes work we should be doing at the right time. Continually reacting to work that needs to be done shows a lack of planning. Plan ahead to eliminate reactive work.
This is full of Yes.. Act. Don’t react.