Focused - 80: The Power of "No"
Episode Date: August 20, 2019Mike and David tackle the challenges that come with saying "No" and why a well-intentioned decline can make all the difference....
Transcript
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Welcome to the Focus Podcast. I'm David Sparks, joined by my fellow co-host, Mr. Mike Schmitz.
Hey, Mike. How you doing?
Hey, David. Doing well. How about you?
I am great. And actually, no, I'm terrible. I just want to say no today.
Yeah. So today I wanted to talk about something on Focus that is my own personal hill to climb
with respect to getting work done. And that's The Power of No.
There's a book called The Power of Yes. I decided somebody should write a book called The Power of
No. There we go. Have they already done that? Maybe you've already read it on Bookworm. I
didn't realize it. No, we haven't covered it for Bookworm yet, but I'm sure it's out there. It's a
really powerful idea. And I think it's important. It's very much in line with kind of what we're trying to build
with focus, being intentional,
not just being more efficient, doing more things.
And it's something that everybody at some point in their life
is going to have to address.
As much of a people pleaser as you are,
you are going to at some point have to learn to say no to things.
Yeah, and that's a big deal.
And I think it's almost a gating issue for unlocking a lot of the stuff we talk about. But before we get to that, a few
announcements. First is, this is August and it's member drive time over at the old network RelayFM.
Relay is celebrating its fifth anniversary. Mike and I are going to be together in San Francisco
playing Family Feud on the Relay Network Family Feud show.
I hope we're on the same team. I had the same thought. Yeah. But either way, it's going to be
a lot of fun. There is a, we'll put a link in the show notes. There's a form, you know, the survey
form. I have not looked at it. Have you looked at it, Mike? I haven't. It's taken every ounce of
willpower I have not to. I'm good
at that. I never cheat. I never look at my Christmas presents. So this is the same thing
in my head. But anyway, so anyway, everybody listening can see the questions before we can and
go in and fill out the survey. When you are a member of RelayFM, there are some benefits. You
get to listen to some members-only shows. There's a crossover show they do once a month.
I've been on that several times over the years.
They have a newsletter.
And every August, most of the shows create extra content for members only.
And that's really a lot of fun.
Rose and I over on Automators are going to be playing Mousetrap with Sal Sigoyan.
Steven and I are going to be doing a draft
of our favorite Apple hardware on Mac Power Users. But the best one, the best one is what
happened on Focus because on Focus for the members only show this year, there was, I guess you'd call
it a podcast takeover. Yes, our show was hijacked by our wives. And I have not listened to any of the audio from
this. I have no idea what to expect from this. But I imagine there's a good amount of making fun
of the ridiculous productivity things that that we try to implement in our families.
Yeah, I think so. All I know is I was in there, I pressed record button, I left the room and 30
minutes later, she just smiled when she walked out and said, OK, I'm done.
I don't know what that means, but either way.
So that's going up.
I think we should let's just pledge, Mike.
Let's neither one of us listen to it until it's live.
All right.
So we will find out when everybody else does what the contents of that members only episode contain.
All right.
So that's that's what's going on.
If you want to sign up to be a member, we'd really appreciate it. This is how Mike and I pay for our shoes doing this stuff.
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to the membership page. Oh, nice. Nice. That Marco, he's always helping us out. I know, right?
All right. So today I wanted to talk about something that is really near and dear to my
heart. For me, it is a fundamental problem in my life is uh saying the word no and um uh it's always been an
issue but it really became an issue as the max barky stuff started to take off then people asked
me to guest on their shows and do collaborative projects and you know write things together and
all these things it was like oh, oh, people love me.
They, what's that Sally Field quote?
They like me, really love me, whatever.
But it's like suddenly people are asking you to do stuff,
and you feel valued, right?
And then you start saying yes to a bunch of stuff,
and then before you know it, all hell breaks loose.
Yes, that's basically it in a nutshell is you kind of hit the
nail on the head that you say yes to a lot of things because it makes you feel good. It makes
you feel valuable. I've been there myself where I've ascribed my value to the things that I was
able to do, the things that I created. And that's not a very healthy or sustainable way to live.
It's difficult to get out of that, especially if you tend to be a people pleaser like myself.
But it's interesting too, because as a parent, I was thinking about this. You know, my two-year-old
has no trouble saying no. In fact, none of my kids have trouble saying no like I do. So what point along the way
did I grow up to the point where all of a sudden this is an issue for me?
Yeah. Is it self-worth? I don't know.
Yeah. I'm not sure. But we can take a lesson from our kids in this particular sense in that it's okay to say no to things. It's okay to know
what's important to you and to prioritize those things. Maybe that's kind of the heart of it is
we get so caught up, so busy. We try to do things more efficiently. But as we talked about, you know,
your reward for doing things more efficiently, at least in a work context, is you get to do more work.
And so we just keep spinning the hamster wheel faster without taking the time to even think about why we're on there in the first place.
What is the thing that really is important to us?
And when you don't know what your yes is, you can't say no to things because you don't know if the thing that you're going to be saying no to
might actually be the yes. So you just sign up for all the things, you try it all out,
and hopefully something sticks. But a lot of it doesn't, at least in my experience.
With a little bit of intentional thought, a little bit of foresight, planning, you can always change
what your yes is down the road. You can try something and then say, well, this really wasn't the thing for me and evolve it later.
But I would argue that that's really the first step is to really identify what is it that you want out of life?
What is the thing that you really want to say yes to?
Yeah, I think that's like the second layer of this.
The first layer is just that desire to please.
Someone asks you for something, you want to give that desire to please you know someone asks you so for something you
want to give that thing to them I that is a hang-up I have you know and and it
just I think a lot of people have it right but I think the second level of it
is you know D what is your big yes you know have you thought that through
because I think once you do,
that suddenly starts making it easier to have a filter to put those requests through.
Yeah. And the filter is the important thing because what we really want is freedom. We want to be able to live life on our terms. But if we don't figure out what those terms are, then it's
very easy to default to living by somebody else's terms and saying yes to things, like you said,
because you don't want to let somebody down. I kind of had this picture in my head as I was
thinking about this. We've talked about finding we've talked about saying, finding your yes,
and then saying no to everything else. And I feel like in that sense, the yes is a good thing,
because it allows you to say no to the other stuff. But the initial scenario that you described,
where you're saying yes to a bunch of other things, which really aren't the thing,
where you're saying yes to a bunch of other things which really aren't the thing. What is happening when you do that, and I'm guilty of this myself, is that you are decreasing the amount of freedom
that you actually have. And this is dangerous because you keep chipping away at that margin
like we talked about with Sean Blanc. And eventually, your limit is at the point of your
load. And there's no room for anything that isn't going to go exactly according to plan. It just
takes one little bump, one little hiccup, and then all the plates that you're trying to spin
come crashing down. And for me, when I recognized
that what I really wanted was freedom,
what I really wanted was to design the life
that I wanted to live, to live life on my own terms.
And then I viewed all of those requests
that came at me as a potential,
how do I wanna say this?
Like if you have a gauge of the amount of freedom that you
have, you know, each one of those requests, that gauge is going to go down a little bit like gas
in your tank. And eventually, you know, you add up enough of those and you've got no freedom left.
And that makes it, in my opinion, my situation makes it a lot easier to say no to those things.
Not ascribing ill intent to any of the things that
people are asking me to do, but recognizing that they're not the ones who are responsible
for designing the life I want to live. I am. Yeah. I mean, there's a couple points there
from my perspective. When I first left the firm and went out on my own, I thought I was going to
get all this work done and publish all these field guides and I was going to have this perfect life. And what I realized instead
was I was spending more time working on everything and getting less work done. And I found myself
feeling like I did when I was a little kid and I would run downhill as fast as I could.
And if you remember that feeling, It was kind of exhilarating,
but you also knew you were going to land on your face
with the slightest stumble or trip.
And I realized that's no way to live.
And I think one of the reasons I put myself there
was the fear of saying no.
And one of the things you had said earlier was
about you don't want to
let somebody down. You know, you say, you don't, you don't, you say yes, because you don't want to
let somebody down. But something that I had to learn kind of the hard way is that you are always
letting somebody down. When you say yes, or when you say no, when you say yes too much,
it just changes the people that you're letting down. Is it somebody on the internet?
Is it your kids?
Is it yourself?
Who are you going to let down with the decisions you make?
And you have to keep that broader perspective, I think, when those requests for commitments come in.
And this is not a problem I have solved in my life, but it's something I'm at least aware of now.
Yeah, and awareness really does make a really big difference.
I agree.
You know, kind of the tipping point for me was recognizing that there were work things that were encroaching on the quality of time and the quantity of time that I had with my family. I was working with the
family business and I was managing a development project and we were working with a team that was
literally all over the world. And from a standard productivity context, my first experience working
in a situation like that, I'm like, this is great. I can work during the day, answer all their
questions. They can work at night. I wake up in the morning, you know, but what ended up happening was I was
responding to the things that they were asking, even though I wasn't at work, I was checking my
phone when I was at home. And kind of the aha moment for me is kind of the same thing as Jake
Knapp in the book, Make Time, you know, where I'm sitting there with my kids and they're pointing out like, hey, why are you always on your phone? And I was like, oh my gosh,
I never wanted to be this guy, but I am totally that guy. And I'm like, this has to change. What
can I do about this? Start setting up some boundaries, you know, turn my phone off as
soon as I walk in the door, put it on the counter and don't look at it again until the morning. It was difficult. And until you reach that point where you're dissatisfied with the way
things are, I would argue, it's going to be really difficult to make an intentional shift like that.
If you can before the stuff hits the fan, that's ideal. But for whatever reason, it seems like a
lot of people, they have to be in the middle of it and the light bulb has to go on before they decide to do something about it.
I'm dealing with it this week because for a variety of really good reasons, I'm recording
a lot of podcasts this week. Plus, I've got several unexpected but urgent matters for clients.
Plus, I'm trying to continue you know towards the end
here of finishing the shortcuts field guide and it's all happening at once and i have travel next
week and and i'm dealing with too many yeses and knowingly so um but the you know it's hard for me
to kind of back out of any of those commitments because i've you know i've been scaling back i
probably need to scale back a little bit further so I don't have weeks like this, but
it's going to happen to you. But I do think this idea of awareness is important.
If you carry around the knowledge of what too many yeses can do to you,
I think it can really help you avoid putting yourself in that spot.
Yeah. Well, thank you, I guess, for not letting me down and showing up to record the podcast today.
No, it's like, I'm not trying, that's the same thing. You know, it's like, it is just one of
those things where, and we'll talk later about some strategies to help deal with this, but it's
not something that I feel like is ever a solved problem for most people.
Right. Right, right.
And I guess, you know, even me saying that,
that just kind of illustrates the point
that you don't want to let other people
that you've made commitments to down.
In this particular case,
we've got to get an episode out the door.
So it's not just me,
it's all the listeners who would show up on a Tuesday
and not have an episode to listen to.
But all of those things are external factors. And I would argue not as important as some of the internal ones that
typically we tend to ignore. So kind of the main idea that I took away from that whole experience
where I was constantly connected to my phone and working even when I
wasn't at work, I recognized that the people that were the most important to me were the ones that
this was encroaching on. My wife, my kids, I want to have an awesome relationship. I want to have a
maximized marriage. I want my kids to be able to talk to me about anything when they get older. I know I got to be building that platform now. And I kind of had that light bulb moment where
I realized that this isn't sustainable. If I keep going on this path, eventually I am going to end
up in the situation that I completely want to avoid. And at that point, I'm not going to care
about how quickly I responded to some people on the other side of the world who were working on a product that we were building. So I needed to
make a change, but it wasn't an urgent thing. It's one of those important but not urgent things
that are going to make the big difference in the long run. But when you're just trying to keep
plates spinning, you feel like, oh, I can just set that off to the side and deal with that later.
No, you really can't deal with that later.
The choices that you make today are going to influence the future that you're going
to have tomorrow.
Your future is a product of the choices that you make today, the habits that you create.
And so you're saying karma is real.
Yep, yep, exactly.
But we don't think about it that way.
We think we can cheat the system.
We think that we're smart enough that when that crisis comes, we'll figure out a way around it.
And so we'll just please the people today and we'll figure that out tomorrow.
Don't steal from future you.
You know, I forget exactly how this saying goes, but a lot of people who end up
in those situations is kind of this, this phrase, like past me was a jerk. You know, they put me in
this spot. Don't be, don't let past you be the jerk who steals from future you. I am, like I said,
this is something I always struggle with. And this is a tough week for me. And like I said,
I've had some kind of client things come up.
And my wife started this wonderful tradition when my kids were little.
And I wasn't there for most of them because I was at the office, you know.
But every year on the first day of school, she has tea.
When they come home, they have a tea party.
And she has little, you know, little snacks.
And she gets out the, you know, the fine china, you know, the stuff you get when you're married that you never use. We use it every year on the first day of school. So we have the
China out and the kids come home from school and we have our first day of school tea. And yesterday
was the first day for my daughter, who's now a senior in high school. So this is her last one,
really. I mean, for all I know, she could be on the other side of the world a year from now.
This is her last one, really.
I mean, for all I know, she could be on the other side of the world a year from now.
And the, but I've got all these people pressuring me.
Hey, I need that thing.
I need that contract.
I need this podcast.
And my wife's like, hey, you know, we're going to do the tea at three o'clock.
And inside for just a minute, you know, I'm thinking, oh, that's something that I can skip today.
And I can get a little bit closer, just catching up with all these people that I'm trying to keep up with,
you know?
And then,
and I immediately caught myself like,
wait a second.
That tea is the reason I do all this stuff.
You know?
Yeah.
What am I doing?
You know?
So I,
three o'clock,
I took a half hour off and went and had a good time yesterday.
but it's like,
it is this no yes battle inside you that rages all day. I, I good time yesterday. But it's like, it is this no-yes battle inside you
that rages all day. I don't know, maybe I'm just worse at this than most people, but this is one
for me that's really hard and I struggle with it every day. No, I think it's not just you,
but the thing that can kind of cause you to say yes to the urge that you just described of, oh, I can get a little bit
ahead here, is the fact that we don't want to miss out on anything. That's really a big key to this,
I think, is that FOMO. Now, you can flip that on its head though, and you can remember the reason
why you do the things like you just described, somebody defined that as the joy of missing out or JOMO, which I really like.
So you were able to course correct in that moment because you remembered the reason why you wanted
to do the things that you're doing, which were contributing to the stress that you were feeling
to get ahead in the first place. That's really the key, I think, is to keep the main thing the main thing, to recognize that work is always going
to be there. I think it was the one thing with Jay Papasan and Gary Keller, where they talk about
you are juggling all of these balls, which represent the different areas of your life.
And a lot of them, family, relationships, social, like that type of stuff, those are made out of
glass. You got to keep those in the air, but the work one, that's the rubber one. That's the one
you should feel free to chuck at any time. And obviously, if you are working in a nine to five,
there are limitations with that. If you have a boss who is saying like, you need to get this
done and you've signed up and you've agreed to the expectations, you've kind of created
the situation yourself, you have to honor that, I would argue, especially for me,
you know, integrity and character is really important to me. I would feel pressured to
follow through with those things. But to the degree that you can, and most of us have a lot more
ability and control over those situations and we realize we should recognize that ultimately
the buck stops with us and we have the ability to say, no, I'm going to go have tea today.
Yeah. I mean, and for so many years, it wasn't a possibility because I was at work or at court.
And this year it's possible. Why on earth would i miss it right yeah same thing
with frankly taking care of myself i mean even though this is a really busy week i worked till
7 30 yesterday and i did not continue i stopped you know and you know went and spent some time
with the family watch a little tv went to. I didn't work bell to bell.
When you get in these pressure situations, it's easy to do.
So I woke up today refreshed and ready to go, which I probably wouldn't have if I had gone until I fell into bed last night.
Right.
And I've been there.
I mean, it does happen.
But don't beat yourself up either.
If it does happen, just recognize that, oh, I messed up. I'm going to course correct. I'm going to do better next time. This episode of Focus is brought to you by Blinkist. Read 3,000
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and all of RelayFM. Some help with this stuff. One thing I think you need to do is be okay
once you get underwater and stuff like this. Just be honest with the people you're working with and
just tell them. You know, I mean, you put all these expectations on yourself. I've got a client
I called this morning and said, hey, I promised I'd have that to you by this morning. It's close,
but I need to do just a little bit more work on it to make it right.
I'll get it to you by lunch.
And he said, fine.
You know, and and, you know, just be honest with people if you feel like you're getting
behind.
But, you know, every time you have to go and and explain that you're going to miss a target,
that should be a warning that you're you're saying yes too much.
Yeah, totally.
A couple other things you've got in this list here. that should be a warning that you're saying yes too much. Yeah, totally.
A couple other things you've got in this list here,
the Node Journal or the text file.
I like this idea.
I actually have not been keeping one of these, but I think you might inspire me to start one.
Do you do this?
Yeah, so like I said, this is a known enemy for me.
So one of the things I do as I've gotten better, my no muscles have
gotten stronger, is whenever I say no to something that sounds like a good thing, you know, like,
it's not just saying no to the stuff that obviously you don't want to do. That's the easy
part. The hard part is saying no to stuff that is truly an opportunity, but just not part of your
big yes. Does that make sense? Yep. And say no to those
is hard. You know, I've had friends ask me to do projects with them that I've had to say no to.
I have turned down speaking engagements and the, um, and every time I do one of those,
I write it down and I just do it in an Apple note. Um, but you could do it in a fancy pad with a fancy pen. I always toy with
the idea, you know, every once in a while I work with Xcode just to kind of have my arms a little
bit around the idea of programming. I always toy with the idea of just releasing an app where you
write down all the things you say no to. If I were to make an app, that would be the app I made.
If someone has already made it, let me know. But honestly, you don't even need an app.
You could just, like I said, write it down anywhere.
But the idea is take a moment to document your victory in saying no.
And then in the future, when someone asks you to say yes,
take a look at that no list and the things you've already turned down
and compare what you're being asked to do to the things you've
already said no to. Make sense? That's a great tip. Yeah. In the moment, you know, you're worried
about saying no to something and missing out on an opportunity. But when you can look back and say,
well, this was a bigger opportunity. I said no to it and it turned out all right. It gives you a
little bit more conviction to say no to that thing. Yeah. And, and one of the reasons you say no is to give yourself the margin.
This episode really bookmarks with the Sean Blanc episode because, you know, it's not just saying no
just to get the other big yes done is a good reason, but also saying no to give yourself
margin is also a very good reason.
One of the things I do is now I just tell people when they ask me about a commitment,
you know, because a lot of the commitment requests I get are from people I know or people who I sort of know. And I don't want to disappoint them, but I just tell them flat out, even if I'm going to
say yes, I always sleep on it. I just have a rule now. I don't say yes without a night's sleep.
always sleep on it. I just have a rule now. I don't say yes without a night's sleep. And as silly as that sounds, giving it a night's sleep quite often gives you a little bit more perspective
as to whether or not this is something you really want to do. Sure. Yeah. I like that.
If you jump out of bed the next day and you're super excited about the project and your
subconscious mind has been planning how to do it, then maybe it's something you should do.
about the project and your subconscious mind has been planning how to do it, then maybe it's something you should do. Right. Yeah. One of the things that I do, which doesn't necessarily
create a bunch of margin immediately in the day-to-day, but is a system that is fairly easy
for me to stick with, and I would argue consistently helps me maintain that margin,
is this retrospective process, which we've talked about even on this show, but it's also in my
personal retreat course, where I force myself to spend like an entire day thinking about three
questions from the last quarter. What should I start doing? What should I stop doing? What should
I keep doing? And I always make myself pick at least
one thing to stop doing. And sometimes that's really tough. Sometimes there's things like I'm
in the middle of letting something go now that I have done for years and I really enjoy doing it
with people that are really great to work with, but it's just not the right thing for me anymore.
It's hard to say no to them, but they've been great about it. You know,
so part of this is like, we project that people are going to be offended or hurt or whatever, but
this particular example, they completely understand. They told me they saw this coming.
I knew I wasn't going to be doing this forever. You know, I just felt like I needed to be loyal
and continue to do the thing. But letting go of that thing is something that isn't going
to pay off immediately. But I know six months from now, 12 months from now, it's going to
significantly decrease my load. And it's going to help me get more centered. And it's going to give
me the margin that I need to see things the right way. And ultimately what
that's going to do is it is going to allow me to say yes to something that is even more in alignment
with the life that I want to create. But I have to build in that system of saying no and letting
things go in order to be able to say yes to those things that are truly the things that are worth
saying yes to. Yeah. I mean, you get lost in the fog when you say yes to those things that are truly the things that are worth saying yes to.
Yeah, I mean, you get lost in the fog
when you say yes too much
and you don't even know which way is up.
Yep, exactly.
One of the things I also do,
I mean, this journaling habit
that I started at the beginning of 2018
just continues to pay dividends for me.
And we just went to MaxDoc together a few weeks ago. And
on the plane ride home, I got out my fancy pen and paper and I journaled MaxDoc, you know,
what happened, the fun things I enjoyed. And then the last part of that was for me, the idea of,
was this worth my time? Is this something I would do again? Like in the immediate aftermath of the
commitment. And it's something I've started doing for every one of those. Like every time I do a
speaking engagement at the end, I evaluate whether it's something I want to do again or whether it
made sense for me or not. Mac stock, by the way, made the cut. I'll go back to that. But the,
but the, but there are some other things that
I have done in the last year and a half that didn't, you know, when I sat down after finishing
it, I also do this like big legal projects, just, just sitting down and journaling, you know, what
went well, what didn't go well, you know, how much time did it really take, you know, and what was,
you know, was it worth it to me? And the, the idea of doing that
as kind of like right afterward has been really effective for me in terms of figuring out where
to say no in the future. Like there, you know, I did a speaking engagement for one group and,
and I realized at the end, it wasn't worth it. When they asked me to come back later,
that was an easy no.
And that kind of stuff I think really helps.
And for me, the best time to do it is right after I finish it, because that's when I've got the best information.
And then I can always go back and read it again if I'm on the fence.
What did I think after I did this the last time?
Right.
Yeah.
I like that.
There's one other thing here, which we kind of talked about earlier
with finding your true yes. And this is another thing that I wanted to unpack a little bit here
because recently I have kind of gone on a journey. I read for Bookworm, The 4-Hour Workweek by Tim Ferriss, which I did not like.
You sent me a message.
You didn't like it either.
It's not my thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We don't need to get into the specifics of that.
But kind of along the same at the same time, I was also listening to an audio book that was recommended to me by a friend in the in the mastermind group that I'm in.
me by a friend in the mastermind group that I'm in. And that is Life and Error by Steve Cook and Sean McCloskey. If you're going to read this book, I do recommend you listen to the audiobook
version because it is a narrative. It's like a fable. If you're familiar with Patrick Lencioni,
those leadership fables, like the five dysfunctions of a team, it's kind of in that vein.
But it's about a family that is doing very well financially, but they're completely stressed
out and essentially their family's falling apart.
They're trying to figure out why.
This guy leaves in not a great mental state, stumbles into a coffee shop, finds a guy that he knew in high
school who just seems to have it all together. And they start meeting and he starts mentoring
this guy basically. Because on the surface, he looks like he is super, super successful.
He just hangs out at the coffee shop all the time. He knows all these super influential people.
And so the guy who's going through this stuff is like, man, he just must be killing it. He must be making millions of dollars. Turns out he's not, but he has taken the time to identify what is important to have millions of dollars. It is to identify what is abundant life. What does that
look like to you? So kind of bookends here, you know, Tim Ferriss, the whole idea behind the
four-hour workbook, he even says this, is to live the millionaire lifestyle without the millions.
Yeah.
Okay. And then this book is basically saying, no, you don't need all of the fancy cars,
the big house, the stuff like that. If you want that, that's completely fine. That can be part of your vision. But don't just default to those
things because everybody else is. And the question that they ask in here, which really messed me up,
was what does prosperity look like to you? So I listened to this. I had my wife listen to this.
So I listened to this. I had my wife listen to this. And then we sat down and we were talking about that. What does prosperity look like to us? And it's not a dollar amount. It's not having the house paid off. It's not the types of material things that you have. It's the kinds of experiences, for us anyways, that that would entail. So, as we've been thinking about this, every couple days we'll text each other as we
think of something specific and say, prosperity to me is fill in the blank. And we've kind of
been collecting a list of these things. And I wanted to share this because this has really
helped us. And I have a feeling for a lot of people who are completely overwhelmed where they
are, are having trouble saying no to things, developing a vision like this might be really
helpful. So I'll just share a couple of these things we have on what's
called our life and air vision. So I've got an amazing marriage and great relationships with
our kids. I kind of talked about that already. I choose to work instead of having to and only on
the things that I consider worthwhile. Now that's not something I can do immediately. That's going
to take some time to get to that point, but this is what I want my life to look
like. So throwing that out there, being in control of how we spend our time by living a simple,
uncomplicated lifestyle where our time isn't already spoken for. I want the freedom and the
margin, both with my time and with our finances, take people out to dinner, coffee, whatever for any reason.
And kind of the phrase that goes along with that is I want to be able to make people feel like a
million bucks even if we don't have a million bucks. I want to eat every meal together as a
family without being in a rush to be somewhere. I want to be involved in homeschooling our kids.
I want to be able to sit and play Lego games, sports with my kids and not think
about anything else. I want to get to the point where I can be an extravagant giver. And really,
that starts now. If I want to give away cars, houses, whatever, I need to be able to give away
the small things now. I want to be able to have a comfortable home. Maybe that's our current house.
But if it's not, I'm willing to sacrifice that to accomplish the vision, you know, where people are always, they always feel welcome and where we can relax.
And I want to be even more involved in discipleship at our church, investing in men
specifically for me and families along with my wife.
So that's a lot of personal detail there.
But I feel it's important because this is the kind of stuff where I've been asking people
this lately.
Like, what does prosperity look like to you?
And they always come back to me like, oh, I'm debt free.
I'm like, no, that's not quite it.
You got to have more meat on it.
What does it look like?
What are you doing?
What does it feel like?
But this has been really helpful for us in figuring out what really our yes is and what we can say no to.
That's a great exercise.
If people want to share that in the forum, that would be a nice place to do that. I think it's a safe space to do that.
But I'd never really thought about it, but for me, it means like going to the first day of school tea.
You know, I have an interesting perspective in the sense that I used to do a lot of litigation
at a law firm, which, you know, litigation is a bonfire of $100
bills. There's, you make good money when you do that for a living. And I left that, you know,
so for me, it's like, kind of, I look at like, what's the price of happiness? I actually know,
because the price of happiness is the difference between what I made when I did the firm. And now
that I'm out on my own making little field guides and doing the type
of law practice doesn't make as much money, but I enjoy doing more. I can tell you the price of
happiness. It's pretty expensive, but you know what? It's worth it because you're only on this
planet so long and I want to be happy. And so, you know, it's just, I have kind of gone through that
journey a little bit with the stuff I've done. And I, it's a very, I'm going to listen to this
book. Thank you for sharing that. Yeah. It's, I will, disclaimer, it is a little bit over the top.
There were some parts of it where you just are kind of like, that's a little
bit absurd. That's a little ridiculous. But I feel like the main premise is pretty good. They do have
like a four point thing in there, which a lot of financial planners have latched on to. But for me,
that wasn't the powerful part of the book. The powerful part of the book was that simple phrase,
what does prosperity look like to you? And then
having to wrestle with that question in identifying what does that look like?
Once you figure that out, then the no's get a lot easier.
Exactly. So maybe some of your no's are pretty extreme. Do you need a couple of vehicles? Do you need to own a house? Could you just rent? Is that in line with what
prosperity and an abundant life looks like to you? Because, I mean, not to get all into the
financial side of this, but every single one of those things that you sign up for, that's
essentially the same thing as saying yes to something. You are sacrificing some freedom
in order to have that thing, which is, again, completely fine if you want to have those things.
One of the pieces of the story as they tell it is that they're walking through, this guy's talking
about his vision and he wants to have this 38 foot boat. Okay, well, that's fine. Why do you
want a 38 foot boat? And they drill down and they basically find out that he doesn't
really want the 38 foot boat. In fact, if he had the 38 foot boat, he would only use it a couple
times a year. It's tied back to an experience he had when he was in college and this guy that he
looked up to and he recognized that he was the supplier of fun for everybody who was on that
boat that weekend. And he's like, that's going to be me someday. So then the question is, how can you start to live out pieces of that ideal future now? How can you be the supplier of fun for the people
around you now? And that's the second piece of this, which is really powerful because
kind of the traditional advice, and again, I don't want to get into the specifics here and debate,
you know, what's right, what's wrong when it comes to financial planning. I'm not qualified to talk about that. But the general idea is basically
you get a good job, you work real hard, you retire, and eventually someday you live the
life you want. Well, that's fine. There's a lot of value in doing that. But what are some of the
ways that you can live out pieces of that right now? Like Like as I'm going through my life and your vision, I recognize that some of this stuff we already do. Like I have on there a weekly date night with my wife
and a getaway every three to six months where we get away from the kids and we go stay somewhere
overnight, kind of like a little mini honeymoon sort of a thing. And if I reflect on where we're
at right now, we've pretty much hit date night every single week for the last several months. And actually she's coming with me to
the relay thing in San Francisco. So she'll be on two trips with me in the last six weeks.
So that's a win. You know, the, the weekly one-on-ones that I do with my kids or the daddy
dates, we've already done that. That's, that's a win. Those are pieces of, those are things that
I can do right now to start living out that
life and their vision.
The next one for me, by the way, is the family meal stuff.
That's one that I know is going to be a little bit harder.
Our kids are all involved in stuff.
But I really do believe that if we agree together that this is a yes, we can say no to some
other things and create the space for that to happen.
It's just how bad do
we want it? Yeah, my wife and I have this joke that if we actually want to get our kids to really
tell us what's going on in their lives, all we have to do is take them out to eat. It's like,
it's like some, for some reason, the shields come down and they just, maybe it's because they know
we're buying them food and that's somewhat of a bribe. I don't know. But we get so much more information if we just go out for, you know, nachos.
I can't explain it.
Right.
Yeah.
It really is kind of magical, the whole idea of like sharing a meal with somebody, which
is why, you know, that's the next piece for us in terms of our family vision.
But also on there is the ability, both having the financial freedom and the time freedom to do that with other people.
You know, I want to be able to see somebody in our church, in our community, you know, interact with someone and recognize that I can help them.
I have something that they need and be able to give them the time that they need.
Because that's really what it comes down to is time.
People don't care how much you know until they know how much you care.
And so you buy them a meal, you're showing them that you care about them and their situation.
Well, we've covered a lot of ground with this, but I think that it's all good.
Give some thought to what does prosperity look like to you.
Maybe it will help you out.
And please, please don't say yes to everything.
You are asking for trouble.
As someone who has the battle scars to prove it.
We've all got scars.
That's the other thing that we should really call out.
We've mentioned it a couple times here today,
but I feel like we really need to drive this home
is that you're not going to nail this
a hundred percent of the time you are going to fail. You're going to find yourself in a situation
where you're like, you idiot. Why did you say yes to this thing? Don't you remember when you said
you were going to say no to a bunch of stuff and avoid situations like this. And at that point,
the worst thing you can do is sit and feel sorry for yourself.
Sometimes you do just have to push through and get out of that season, but then do things that you can right now to make sure that tomorrow is going to be better.
Maybe in addition to a no list, I need to have a regrettable yes list.
There you go.
Yeah.
I like that.
Something that helped me with this was a book.
It's called Essentialism by Greg McCown.
And it comes up on the show quite often.
It seems like a lot of guests like that book.
But I don't know how old it is, but I read it years ago.
And it's on my yearly list.
I have a couple of books that I read once a year.
And this is one of those because it just kind of helps get me back to center on this question.
it just kind of helps get me back to center on this question. And, and the whole book talks about,
you know, you know, finding the big yes and, and, you know, putting the, applying that filter.
I think some of it is just giving yourself a little space between the question and the answer to, uh, to hopefully not say yes to everything, but, but, you know, let us know in the forums,
how it's going for you. And like Mike said, you're never going to completely nail this, but if you can get better
at it, it will improve your life.
Yeah.
I also like the idea of in the forums, if people want to chime in and share kind of
their vision, I'll call it a life and your vision because that's the first time I heard
it in that specific context from that book.
But really, it's just a picture of what the life you want to live looks like. And again, it's not tied to a dollar amount.
But if you want to share that sort of thing in the forum, I think that might be really interesting.
The people that I've challenged with that question, a lot of them have had trouble coming
up with an answer. They can't picture the scenario of
sitting down and having tea. They immediately go to, what does that look like financially?
But the whole idea of margin is it's not just the finances. It's all the different areas that
Sean talked about. For me, the big one is time. I want to have more time margin. So
what does that look like? If I had more time margin, what does that allow me to do? Those types of things. But I also feel like the focused audience, these are the people who would understand this. And when you get a bunch of people sharing that sort of thing, it might spark some ideas for yourself.
some ideas for yourself. Yeah. It's funny you say that because when I knew Sean was doing a course on margin, I thought that all it was about was time. Before I saw the course,
he covers finances and he covers a whole bunch of topics under the idea of margin. In my head,
the only thing margin that counts is time because that's the one I struggle with the most.
Yeah, right.
Yeah, I legitimately didn't think that there was anything to the course except time.
And of course, it was much more.
Yep.
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Okay, Mike, we got some feedback, starting with a note on the forums from Petey.
Yeah, this is a fairly lengthy post, so I'm going to try to summarize this. I do think that I will probably diminish
a little bit of the impact of the message. So definitely go read this for yourself.
But PD is struggling with a couple different things. They mentioned that they use OmniFocus.
It's a mess. They subscribe to the GTD mantra, getting things out of your brain,
but they feel like they don't have a
lot. They don't feel like they have much focus. They're trying to grow their business. They're
trying to get their ducks in a row. They're trying to develop these systems. A lot of days,
they mentioned they stare aimlessly into their screen or task managers like they can't decide
what to do. They end up watching YouTube for hours. Sometimes they feel like a huge failure
because of all of this.
And I guess the first thing I would say is that we've all been there. You're not a huge failure.
We've all succumbed to that sort of thing. Maybe it's not YouTube. Maybe it's something else.
For me, it's civilization. Yeah. That's the one game I go back to all the time. And now it's on
my iPad. So one more turn, one more turn. Yep. Just, just one more turn, you know, and then
hours later. But I, the thing that stood out to me initially when I read this was that this is
very much in line with a lot of the stuff that we've talked about today. There is some more,
more stuff here, which we can, we can kind of unpack, but specifically the staring at your
task manager and not knowing what to do. I've been there. And this is my issue with task managers is that it's a list of all the things that you should be doing. It doesn't show you the one thing that you should be doing. That was a big takeaway I got from reading Make Time by Jake Knapp and John Zeratsky was that idea of the daily highlight. What's the one thing that I'm going to do today? If I got this thing done, then today is a success. That's really
helped me. It's just picking that one thing and not going off of a list. Because if you have a
list, there will be times when you don't get through the list. And then you've got stuff
that's already carried over until tomorrow, you're already behind. It's kind of a system
set up for failure. Yeah. And this is stuff i think i kind of talked about when
we talked about hyper scheduling but it's just you have to be realistic in your expectations of
yourself and you know if you if you just have a bunch of white nose if you're in the fog to use
the term i used earlier you just don't know which way is up you don't know what to do to me that
whole process of in the evening the day before writing down writing down. So I have OmniFocus. I use it. I'm a big OmniFocus user. I need
all that task management because I have many clients that rely on me and I have many people
I work with. So I need that kind of big boy task management. But at the end of the day,
big boy task management. But at the end of the day, that gets transcribed, you know, by my chicken scratch onto a piece of paper that usually is somewhere between five and 12 items for the next
day. And when I wake up and I show in my office, it's sitting on my desk and I just start doing
those things. I go from manager to maker and I just start doing the thing on the list. And I
think giving yourself like reasonable,
rational limits every day is a really good start because if you've only got three left,
you're not going to be tempted to go on YouTube. You're going to knock those three things down.
Then you can go on YouTube. Yeah. I like that. If you've got another, if you've got a thousand
things in there, what's the point? Just start on YouTube at 9am. Yeah. Right, right. I think
another important piece of what you what you just shared is that you have the things prepped the day
before. If you the first thing you do in your day, and I know a lot of people who do this,
but for me, it's never worked, where they will get up in the morning, and they will select the
most important things. That to me sounds like it would contribute to the state that PD is describing, where there's all
these different things that they could do, and they've got the freedom to do those things. But
the indecision, that's the thing that's really difficult. And that's the thing they have trouble
with in the moment. So for me, I've found it helpful to plan out my day the night
before, whether that is picking five tasks that I'm going to work on or just simply selecting this
is going to be the highlight for the day tomorrow. But that allows me when I get up to go through my
morning routine, get ready for the day. And then when it's time to sit down and actually do the
work, I know exactly what to do and I'm able to just step into it.
And I think that it sounds like that's what you do. I, again, like I said, I know a lot of people
who do it the other way. They'll identify the things they're going to do at the beginning of
the day. But I would say try it the other way. Try planning it, selecting the things the night
before and then eliminate the friction in the morning if that's going to be one of the things
that can cause you to get off track or get stuck. Yeah, well, I'd recommend
you try them both and see what resonates with you because everybody's different. But I know
that morning David as a manager is an idiot. Yeah, he gives me way more work than I will ever finish.
And he's just way too optimistic about how much we'll get
done in a day. Whereas afternoon manager, David is beat down from the prior day. And he realizes
much more realistic, realizes how much I'm going to get done. And, um, it just, it was when I made
that switch, when I tried to immediately worked for me, it was like, it was not like gradually,
it immediately worked for me. It was like, it was not like gradually, oh, this is, this may be better. It was like, oh, this is way better. And the other thing is Morning David, although he's
a lousy manager, he's a great worker. So Morning David has that list on his list. He just immediately
just goes at it like a, you know, like a crazy man. And so that, that's just what I found. And,
you know, you combine that with the blocks of scheduling. You know, if I just listened to manager David, my life would be so much easier,
but so often I don't, even though I know it, even though I have a podcast about it,
even though I know better, even though I read the books, Mike tells me to read, I still,
I still blow it sometimes. But, but if I, if I, if I do have afternoon
manager set up the day, there's such a, there's a significantly better chance that I'm going to do.
Okay. Yeah. I think there's a lot, uh, a lot of parallels by the way, to what you just talked
about at the end of the day, when you're, you're beat down and your energy levels aren't super high,
you're more realistic when you're planning your day. I feel like that's kind of the natural tendency.
So you could leverage that to your advantage.
Kind of in my mind,
I view planning your day at the beginning of the day
sort of like going to the grocery store when you're hungry.
You end up buying all this stuff that you're not going to eat.
Yeah, exactly.
And then you just have
that overhead. I mean, that one of the things I'm reading from PD's email is just, you know,
the sense of overwhelm, you know, it's like, okay, I'm buying the tools people say I'm supposed to
buy, but I'm still not getting anything done. And I feel overwhelmed. Well, you just got to,
you know, I, I really think the idea of separating, maybe we do a show on this someday,
you know, manager me versus employing me. Well, even if you're working for a big corporation,
you still have manager me in your head that needs to help you figure things out and
separating the, you know, figuring out what I'm going to do versus doing the thing,
putting those in two different boxes can really make a difference.
Yeah, absolutely.
Hang in there, Petey.
Yeah, let us know how it goes.
Kind of related,
we've got another piece of feedback here from Bob,
who basically is wondering
how to track different projects when they are collaborating with other people.
That's kind of the gist of this that I'm teasing out here. So they throw out a bunch of different
apps and suggestions. Evernote, OmniPlan, Apple Notes, OmniFocus obviously doesn't really work
with Teams. So how do you keep all
that straight when you're working with other people? How do you communicate, make sure that
everything stays straight? For me, I don't try to put those things into my system necessarily.
I'll just use the system that somebody else is using. Sometimes that can get complicated. And that's
one of the things that kind of moved me away from OmniFocus being the single source of truth in
terms of my tasks is that at one point, I was working with five different teams working in
five different online task managers at the same time. And to manually copy all that stuff over
into OmniFocus was just ridiculous. I, you shouldn't have it in two places.
Yeah, it was enough for me to know that at this point, this time, this day, I'm going to be working on this thing.
And at that point, I'm going to have this website open, which is going to have all the task information that I need and all the communication that goes along with it.
There probably is some point where it is worthwhile to bring all of those things into a single silo.
But for me, I've just embraced that everybody's got their own system they're going to use. I'm
going to work with those and I'm just going to be okay with keeping my own stuff in my own thing and
all the other stuff in the different silos. How do you handle this?
I have a very similar idea, but maybe from a slightly different perspective. I feel like I'm not my brother's keeper, right? If I'm working
with someone on a project, I don't care what they use, you know, whether they use an online system,
whether they use a napkin, whether they use OmniFocus, I don't care. I mean, they have
the parts they're supposed to do. I track the parts I'm supposed to do in OmniFocus because
that's, you know, my weapon of choice. You know, of choice. There's a whole lot of reasons I like it. But either way, that's where
I do most of that. Now, occasionally, you have information collaboration type things where you
need to keep track of what each other's doing. And I use cloud services for that. As an example,
on this shortcuts field guide I'm working on we've got
a massive error table and there's three people working on it there's me there's an editor and
there's kind of a production person and we all have different tasks and you can see in there
who's doing what and what their status is with just an air table database i use basecamp with
some other stuff you know but those things
are just it's the barest of management it's just saying this person has this job to upload this
video to this website was it done or not it's not like tracking them going through the steps
of doing it so i like to just keep my stuff in omniFocus. And then to the extent there is web services connecting people, I just like to see that for status.
And that's just the way I do it.
Sure.
I like that.
And that kind of touches on another piece of this maybe is they had asked, what are some effective ways to keep ongoing projects in my focus on a daily, weekly, even monthly basis?
ongoing projects and my focus on a daily, weekly, even monthly basis. So in this scenario you just described where you're not tracking all of the individual pieces of something, you're trusting
the other person to do what they say they're going to do. But eventually you want to reconsider
everything associated with that project. Maybe it's just you want to bring it to front of mind
during a review and you want to consider there are better ways of doing things with this particular project.
I would say go ahead and throw that sort of task in your OmniFocus.
OmniFocus is, by the way, the best app in terms of reviewing things.
I don't know why no one has copied the OmniFocus review tab.
Me neither.
But it's killer.
So you could say review this every month, every three's, it's killer. So you could say, review this every month,
every three months, every six months, you know, you may have a task in there, David, to
evaluate whether I want to keep doing focus with Mike every six months. I don't know.
Like that's the kind of, that's the kind of thing though, that like OmniFocus makes easy
because you can just put that in there and not even think about it. And then you just go to do
your weekly review and oh, there's, there's the thing. I guess I'll spend some time thinking about that.
Yeah, and one of the things I do
on those collaborative projects
is I will have a thread of tasks
related to checking in.
If I'm assigning work to people,
I'll get a check-in task in two weeks
to say check in with Leilani
to make sure this is done.
And that's just a task I do out is done you know and and that's just
a task i do out of omni focus and it's not doing her work or even like calling her it's just
checking to see that it's okay and if i see any kind of problem i can email her or give her a
phone call and get to the bottom of it you know so um you can manage this stuff you know however
you want and and getting and i comment i want and getting into a common web-based task
management system where everybody sees everything everybody else is doing. That can work too. I
don't think there's one answer to this, but for me, I don't want all that noise. I just want to
be responsible for the stuff I need to do. And I work with people that I can rely on to get their
pieces done too. And that's the best way to do it. I guess if you're in a big company and you can't necessarily rely
on other people, that may change your strategy. Sure. Yeah. We've got one other piece of feedback
here related to project management in a roundabout way, which is tied to the metaphor of life being a marathon.
So this is from somebody, Ken, who is a marathon runner.
And they've got a few pieces of advice for us.
They mentioned that during a marathon, they use the practice and training that they've
carried out.
They take a steady pace until about 16 to 18 miles.
Then they switch tack and they do a run walk strategy where they'll run for eight minutes
and walk for one.
Just like real life,
it's good to approach
any project time period
or phase of life with a strategy,
which includes practice,
awareness and the willingness
to switch tack
dependent on the circumstances.
It's not a sprint.
It's not a plod,
nor is it a fixed path.
Sometimes dependent
on the running surface,
you need to switch shoes.
No point running on tracks
in road shoes. I point running on tracks in road
shoes. I thought this was great. This encapsulates so many different things, even that we've talked
about this episode, where you don't really know exactly how things are going to unfold, but you do
know what the next step is going to be. And it's okay to say, I need to change my strategy for this
particular season of my life.
Yeah.
I mean, that's just so much.
It really encapsulates what we're trying to do with this show.
I mean, we're not trying to give you all the answers.
We don't have them all.
But we have a few wounds and scars and a little wisdom along the way.
And I think being flexible and trying to apply some of the things we talk about as you make your way through life might help out, hopefully.
Yep.
One other thing here.
This is a tweet from Kyle's Q9.
And they took the moving the needle idea and implemented it into Todoist.
Yeah, that was cool.
Yeah. and implemented it into Todoist. Yeah, that was cool. Yeah, so let me see if I can kind of summarize this right because they've got a couple different filters here.
They've got moving the needle general,
personal and projects moving the needle,
and then work moving the needle.
And so I had asked a follow-up question with this,
like how are these filters configured
because I don't really use Todoist myself.
I know really nothing about the app.
Kyle says they're using P1 priority
for moving the needle tasks
and they set it up to show them
the P1 tasks for that day
and overdue tasks as well.
I think this is a great idea
and they basically also say
that it's helped them deal
with the overwhelm that comes
from looking at 20 things
that they have to do
and not being able to discern, to Petey's point, what's important, what's not,
what they should be doing at that moment. Yeah. And he was dealing with the same problem of having
so many tasks, but not knowing what was the big one. Yep. I guess to check in on moving the needle,
I mean, I'm still using that system every day and it's a great way to keep myself moving forward on the most important projects.
And hopefully help me say no more often when I see that the needle isn't moving much.
Right.
Yeah, we've got a couple guest episodes coming up with some additional ideas on how to implant moving the needle.
So stay tuned for those.
All right.
Well, I think we covered it.
Say no more often, gang.
I have this joke
when I talk to people about productivity
and it's not even really a joke.
I feel like everybody spends so much time
talking about this stuff and reading books.
We make podcasts about it.
But at the end of the day,
if you can just say no more often,
a lot of this stuff gets a lot easier.
It's true.
Yeah.
Yeah, we know what to do.
We just have trouble doing it.
Yeah.
Anyway, we are The Focus Podcast.
Thank you so much for all the listeners
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And we'll see you all in a few weeks.