Modern Wisdom - #894 - Dan Koe - How To Design Your Life For Peak Creativity
Episode Date: January 25, 2025Dan Koe is a writer, entrepreneur, and creator. Finding your creative spark is one of life’s greatest journeys. So, what are the tips and tricks to help you design a life that maximises your full cr...eative and productive potential? Expect to learn if there is a delusion of hard work and why more hard work doesn’t make you rich, what the tension between creativity and productivity is, how to design your life for peak creative output, how to figure out what you want in life, how to get over imposter syndrome, the importance of writing as a practise and much more... Sponsors: See discounts for all the products I use and recommend: https://chriswillx.com/deals Get 20% off the cleanest bone broth on the market at https://www.kettleandfire.com/modernwisdom (use code MODERNWISDOM) Get a 20% discount on Nomatic’s amazing luggage at https://nomatic.com/modernwisdom Join Whoop’s January Jumpstart Challenge and get your first month for free at https://join.whoop.com/modernwisdom Extra Stuff: Get my free reading list of 100 books to read before you die: https://chriswillx.com/books Try my productivity energy drink Neutonic: https://neutonic.com/modernwisdom Episodes You Might Enjoy: #577 - David Goggins - This Is How To Master Your Life: https://tinyurl.com/43hv6y59 #712 - Dr Jordan Peterson - How To Destroy Your Negative Beliefs: https://tinyurl.com/2rtz7avf #700 - Dr Andrew Huberman - The Secret Tools To Hack Your Brain: https://tinyurl.com/3ccn5vkp - Get In Touch: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chriswillx Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/chriswillx YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/modernwisdompodcast Email: https://chriswillx.com/contact - Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Most people's lives are determined by how they choose to cure their boredom.
What's that mean?
Oh man, the story of that came from my friend, my YouTube editor.
We were out getting dinner one night and he said he wanted to start a company called Bored.
Like, you know, just a little passion project. And it was because he had been bored for so long in his life that he, the only
options that he saw were to do the typical things that you do when you're bored.
You scroll on your phone.
Maybe you watch Netflix, you hang out with friends.
There, there isn't really something to build towards.
Right.
And so I kind of ideated that with him for a decent amount of time, because the reason he wanted to start that specifically
was to give people, help people create a project that they could work on that would help cure their
boredom. And so that kind of ties into another tweet I wrote where if you're bored, build.
So build your body, build your business,
build anything really, just focus that boredom
towards something that isn't,
it isn't giving the opportunity for entropy to take hold.
You'll know Parkinson's law work expands
to fill the time given to it.
This almost feels like it could be Coe's law, which would be life expands to fill the boredom
given to it.
What's funny is that I have a Coe's law, but it was for creative work.
So man, what was it?
It was something along the lines of the same thing, where it's creative work.
The the work expands the results expand.
To fit the time allotted for completion, where my whole thing with that is since I.
Didn't have a job for too long.
I had worked part time jobs for quite a while, but I was freelance pretty
quickly out of a job. And what I started to realize is that when you progress through freelance work,
and then I got introduced to social media and digital products, physical products, other things
that I just wasn't aware of at the time, it was very interesting how I could make so much more
very interesting how I could make so much more without increasing the amount of work that I did.
Yeah, that is interesting.
So just to round out the boredom thing, it kind of feels to me like if you don't
have something to take up your time, your habits and your behavior will sort of
default to the path of least resistance.
Is that fair to say?
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Interesting.
Okay.
What about hard work?
Do you think there's a delusion around hard work?
Uh, by delusion, I would say misconception or the poorly, poorly fabricated
expectations in your head.
Where if you work hard on one thing for a specific amount of time,
you aren't necessarily, you don't deserve something that someone else has gotten by doing that specific thing.
So as an example, if you spend one year writing a book, that is a lot of hard work, but that
doesn't mean that you deserve $100,000 a year for doing that specific thing.
Right?
And so, since we, most of us, or quite a few of us, we go to school, we get a job, and
that frames our mind in quite a few different ways.
One being that we tie a specific amount of work or a specific amount of hours of work each week to a specific number on a paycheck.
When that doesn't necessarily have to be the case and the thing that can trip you up there is you bring that mindset over into your creative work or building your own thing.
And you work very hard, but then you get discouraged when you don't get the same amount of results or you get substantially less until you pull the
levers that allow you to make substantially more.
Yeah.
I, uh, it's a ruthless realization that hard work doesn't fix all of your
problems and that what you work on is significantly more important than how hard you work.
And I've been sort of fascinated by this idea of, um, telling people to work harder
that already work quite hard or telling people that, that, uh, already chill out
that they need to learn how to relax, but you need, you know, you need to target
the particular vaccine or the particular, uh, modality for the person that you're
speaking to and, um, yeah, the hard, uh, modality for the person that you're speaking to.
And, um, yeah, the hard work thing, you know, I understand why, and maybe it was
right, you know, the last sort of 10 years have really been dominated by
discussions around gritting your teeth, uh, avoiding a victim hood mentality,
discipline, motivation, stuff like that.
And, uh, on average for most people, I think that's right, but it does a lot of the time,
forget some other real high points of leverage.
What are you choosing to work on?
How easy are you finding it?
What are you sacrificing over the longterm in order to be able to achieve these results
in the short term?
If you say in the short term results are determined by your intensity in the longterm
results are determined by your consistency.
If you trade the latter for the former, you end up being kicked out of the game quite In the short term results are determined by your intensity, in the long term results are determined by your consistency.
If you trade the latter for the former, you end up being kicked out of the game quite early.
What would be another one?
For instance, saying that working harder results in better outcomes in life, which means that focusing on working hard and building up discipline is the only thing that matters when creativity, a step functions that can
increase whatever it is that you're trying to achieve by, you know, sort of massive amounts.
So yeah, all this to say as a person who works really fucking hard, like I love it,
but I kind of need to remind myself that it's not a panacea, it's not a one size fits all
solution to all problems.
There are very few problems that won't get better by working harder, but there
are significantly better solutions than just working harder a lot of the time.
And being able to hold those two thoughts in your mind at the same time is tough.
It's difficult.
Yeah.
I think it comes down to context and pain points quite often where if you don't
have the pain point of not getting results out of your hard work, then maybe you don't
need to not work harder, right?
It's completely dependent on the person situation where a lot of the people who are discouraged
by working so hard and not getting anywhere with it, they're not real.
They're not realizing that that within
itself is a pain point that has to be solved. And so then they don't have a new direction to work.
So they're, they're not registering their hard work leading to a lack of results as a problem
where you can create a solution and start working on that thing. So then when you come back to the hard work or whatever it is, you're moving
from a higher vantage point so you can make better decisions toward that thing.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Talk to me about the sort of handling the trade-offs between growth and
maintaining simplicity because those two things I think, uh,
often end up coming at the cost of each other.
Yeah.
It's dependent on what you're building and your goals.
For me, I can just speak from experience where in my life I've noticed maybe three
or four different macro periods of productivity or creativity where there's typically seasons
where I feel lost and those feel those seasons of feeling lost or just not knowing what to
work on next usually coming come after hitting some kind of goal that I've been pursuing
for a long time.
So all of these are cyclical.
They're not exact kind of like chapters in a book where each one resets, they each have
their own goal, they each have their own highs and lows.
That's how I like to view life from a bigger picture, but starts out as feeling lost.
And then if you don't get distracted there or you don't get bored or you fill your time with the default activities that come after being bored,
then you start to move into this phase of curiosity.
So first phase feeling lost, second phase curiosity, you start to pursue new interests
or go down a new rabbit hole or study something, whatever it may be.
And you're trying to find, you're trying to experiment with different things until you find that one thing that you can't pull yourself away from.
And then at that point, you kind of get pulled naturally into the season of intensity.
And that's where you make a lot of the progress for me.
Those are where the long 12 hour work days come into play.
For me, those are where the long 12 hour workdays come into play. And that's when I build a new project, new product, new software as I'm doing right now,
completely new, right?
Novel, new, feels very good, challenges high.
That's when fulfillment is also very high.
And then once that reaches, there's like two options, right?
You can fly too high and touch the sun and get burned a bit.
And you learn a lot from that.
Or you stay aware during it and you realize,
okay, I'm reaching this peak.
I need to figure out how to sustain
a higher baseline from this.
And for me, it's when I hit some kind of new monthly high.
In the gym, that could be a new weight. In the gym that could be a new weight in business. I could be
A certain amount of followers in a month or whatever. It may be money in a month. Who knows but
It's a spike for me. I know that's not sustainable. So along the way
I have to be thinking how I'm going to be consistent at this thing. And that's kind of the fourth phase is the consistency phase where what system
can I build to maintain a higher baseline of the progress that I've made with this
thing while not trying to sustain this peak that I know is ultimately unsustainable
if I want to do different things in my life.
Talk to me about the emotion that comes up when you reach that new base or that
new highest peak.
And then you're coming back.
Yes.
It sounds great to think, well, okay.
Every, every stock hits 80 H H's and then we come back and we go,
okay, this is the new base, right.
But as you feel the trajectory begin to reverse, despite the fact it's
just gone in the other direction, uh, that feels like an emotional problem,
not just a, an operational problem.
Yeah.
Uh, that's kind of why it's cyclical.
Cause you start to feel lost in a sense where you can work hard and try to push
through it and maybe there are some situations where you can sustain a very
high baseline and that's the singular thing that you do. But for me, uh, I tend to like desire to drop back down to some kind of.
Lifestyle that I can maintain while not pushing too hard, but also it's
like adding muscle mass, right?
The intensity phase is for building muscle.
The consistency phase is for cutting fat and revealing what you built underneath.
And when you do that enough over time, you're kind of surprised with where you end up after doing
those things. But in terms of the emotions, you can kind of think of how it is when you feel
after a bulk, if you do some kind of a dirty bulk. I don't really do that. Yeah. If you do an epic dirty bulk, then you
usually feel pretty shitty. You feel sluggish, you feel tired, you want to train because
it's really enjoyable, but every other area of your life, it took a backseat or it is
taking a backseat now. And so you feel that for a bit. You just feel sluggish, you feel
tired, you don't have the same motivation that you did at the very beginning
of that intensity phase and.
It starts to round out a lot more.
It normalizes like a, a wave.
Maintaining simplicity.
Uh, I think reducing down complexity is something that a lot of people struggle
with, uh, you know, there's an unlimited number of things that we can choose to do with
our time, a lot of options, uh, even within one project, you know, little
hobbies and, oh, maybe I'm going to take a CrossFit.
I've always wanted to learn Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu or, you know, maybe I should,
maybe I should start doing improv on a nighttime or whatever it might be.
Um, for the people who are competent and like to sort of acquire skills, like
to feel like they're making progress.
Um, how do you come to think about ensuring that simplicity is prioritized
so that you don't sort of dilute down your attention across, across too many
things, both professionally, personally, socially, et cetera.
Yeah.
Uh, for me, it comes with time.
Where in the past, I mean, I still do.
I try things.
If I have a very strong desire, I allow myself
to try them at least once.
I'm also very aware that if I don't invest energy
into that thing, then I'm probably not
going to enjoy it as much as if I just did it one time.
So for something like jujitsu, I never really tried that one specific thing,
but I would try it.
I take a few classes and then if I didn't like it, or I didn't see it
fitting inside of my lifestyle, then I'd be quick to quit that thing.
What does not fitting inside of your lifestyle mean?
Hmm.
Uh, if it impacts or takes away from my higher priority goals.
So for me, training, lifting weights in the gym, that's always just been a top
priority, like when I would get into running, that's something that I did for
a decent amount of time and I did enjoy it, but I couldn't find the balance of
it, but I couldn't find the balance of running with training, with, uh, work
with social time, I could fit it in the, in the morning, but it just, there's a lot of moving pieces when you decide to fit something new into your day and
nutrition training, all of the things that you already have inside of there.
If you are a curious person that likes to acquire these skills, it's very useful to
do because you can pull some kind of principle or lever or lesson out of it to apply to other
domains of your life to kind of fill it from the thing that it was missing that was making
you want to run or do jujitsu in the first place and get that out of your system. But at the right, when you ask that question, what I said was that it takes
some time because the more you try and experiment with these things, the more
you realize the, the more you can approach those new desires with a better perspective.
And shiny object syndrome to me, isn't something that is bad at all.
You just have to be able to refocus during that, or you need to be able to
paint maintain your priorities during that.
So you mentioned before, uh, attention that I kind of ignored for quite a while.
I think, uh, maybe like a hammer that sees everything as a
nail. I just assumed, I assumed that basically all problems in my life could
be fixed by more hard work, more discipline, more focus, more productivity,
you know, somewhere in between those four things, which is essentially sort of
gripping more tightly, paying more attention, becoming distracted less.
paying more attention, becoming distracted less. But especially this year, I've realized that the creativity part results in
changes, sort of step changes of insight about your own life, progress professionally
or personally or whatever it is, doing something that's new and effective in a
different sort of a way or coming up with a different kind of an
idea.
And then you can still iterate on that, but that I basically prioritized zero
time for creativity in the past.
I was very much sort of a blunt, blunt force trauma, uh, hard work type person.
And, um, this tension between creativity and productivity, I think is
still even with the Rick Rubens of the world and the Dan Co's of the world.
Uh, I think it's still very much overlooked. So I really want you to sort of break that apart.
Yeah.
I'll start off by saying that I was the complete opposite when I was first
starting out, I always wanted to, I was very lazy or whatever definition of lazy you can give where it's like productive procrastination in a sense where.
I would be playing video games and I would just try to fit in some work.
That would lead to something better right the priority was the video games the work was just something I did in between and what that.
The work was just something I did in between. And what that made me have to do, while I didn't get it right the first time around
because that's very difficult to do, is that I would at least have to think about what
are the one to two things that really move the lever here.
And when you're doing something creative, creative work has a very, it has a lot more opportunity to find and leverage those high priority things.
Let's take a social post for example. If you're an author, you're a musician, you don't have to be a quote-unquote content creator.
If you have any kind of work that you want to spread, social media is a decent way to do that. And with social media, if you post one thing and it is very good,
then that post can do better than a thousand other people's posts that went out today.
And you can do quite well with that thing. So that's the first thing is try to adopt
a mindset that allows you to at least search for those higher leverage things.
Because while you're doing the work, then you'll be able to identify them.
Because if you aren't necessarily looking for them, they may just pass you by,
and you may not realize that this could lead to an exponential event
of a lot of progress in that specific amount of time.
a lot of progress in that specific amount of time.
When it really came to me is when I started to remove
a lot of what I would call my bad habits, which were the video games, which were the Netflix,
which were quite a few things, the junk food.
I just remember sophomore year of college,
living in the dorms, terrible time,
quit the gym, just was not productive, very low period of my life.
And after COVID specifically, I started going on walks because the COVID
15 or whatever they call it, I couldn't go to the gym.
I was gaining a decent amount of weight.
I just felt like the Pillsbury Doughboy and I'm tall so it wasn't that bad.
But in my face you could see like it's all puffy then didn't like that.
So started going on walks and I would listen to audiobooks during that time.
And started to notice like all of these ideas were starting to pop into my head that never had before.
It was just a weird realization of like, wow, I actually have the ability to generate good ideas that sound unique to me.
And with those ideas, I've realized the power of them later, is that those can fuel different aspects of your creative work.
So that's all to say and to wrap around,
that I believe productivity is highly dependent on creativity
and that when you separate them, both of them
lose their impact to quite some degree
Where to give an example if I'm writing a book or I'm creating any kind of a project
It doesn't matter what kind of a project is
That project my mind expands to
fill
the context of that project so when I'm on a walk or I'm making time for creativity, or
when the default mode network in my brain is activated, where it's you're at rest,
you're not focused on work, that's like shower thoughts when ideas just pop into your subconscious
or into your conscious. Those ideas that happen during the creative period are usually the things
that are higher leverage and apply directly to the project that you were
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Isn't it strange we get even though when we're working on the problem,
we're kind of blinded in this way.
You're on a set of train tracks, but maybe they're not quite the right ones.
And you've sort of got this weird momentum thing that's carrying you forward.
And you think, well, I'm doing the thing.
This is what was on the to-do list for today, but you never actually step back
and fully get up and above and look at the territory.
Yeah.
Let's say that there's somebody listening who identifies with me as a recovering productivity
addict.
How do you design your lifestyle for peak creativity?
Lots of walks, Ben.
Quite a few walks where I try to bake things in and try to blur the lines as much as I can between creativity,
productivity, health, whatever my goals are.
They do kind of all blend together.
In the morning, I wake up and go on a walk, the fresh morning sunlight in your eyes, like
everyone wants you to get. After that, shower, hygiene, etc. gets straight into some
kind of building, right? I like to separate my days as much as I can and lump them into two
categories where it's releasing or constraining entropy and releasing entropy. Where in the
morning, don't touch your phone, don't do anything that would cause a rogue thought to pop into your head
and just cloud your mind for the rest of the day.
So the morning on my walk is just soul intention focused on, OK,
what am I writing about today?
Is can I find a starting point for when I get back?
And then the first project that I'm working on
is usually something that is novel that needs to be done.
First thing in the morning.
This is something like a book or a longer term project that takes that extra effort
to build.
Then after that, I get into my main levers, which is writing for me.
So that's newsletter, social posts, and those are the main things because those
pull traffic, right?
If I'm not building a product or a project, then my main focus is on getting
traffic to those specific things.
And then the, after that, I take a walk to kind of create that segment where it's
like, okay, now I can start letting more people into my day
and start taking on more conversations.
And when I get back, that's usually when I'll check email,
when I'll check Slack, when I'll check Telegram,
let other things come into play.
Do a lot of the maintenance or admin work
where it's not really creative, it doesn't require a lot of the maintenance or admin work where it's, it's not really creative.
It doesn't require a lot of focused attention on that thing.
And then after that block, all go to the gym.
And then that's kind of like a hard separation where the rest of the day, it's
kind of like reading, writing, dabbling.
It's just free flow, right?
If I have priority things that I need to do, I'll sit down and do them.
If I don't, I'll maybe read a bit, go to my computer, walk around.
It's kind of like a pacing balance of productivity and creativity.
Isn't it interesting that in order to be able to get the creativity thing, even
when you're in just letting the ideas come to me and writing, I'm doing the
social posts, I'm doing whatever I need.
You still need to apply discipline because if you didn't apply the discipline,
you'd have already checked Slack and that would have distracted you on the
morning and that one email and that guy, fuck, I gotta have that call with that
guy later on and I put it off twice already and so on and so forth.
So there still is an importance of discipline within the act of being creative.
You need to sort of, you, you need to fortify yourself through, uh, discipline,
but primarily saying no,
in order to then allow the creativity to come out.
Yeah.
I think of it as a...
Creativity still has constraints
and it still thrives within constraints.
I feel like with productivity,
it's more of a narrow block.
You're just hyper-focused on one thing.
With creativity. You're
not letting your mind just be exposed to absolute chaos and like drowning in that. That's what
leads to the boredom, anxiety, overwhelm, other things that come from kind of leaving
that skill challenge match where creativity, at least in my lens, is when my mind is operating within a specific set of constraints, usually a project.
Right? So if it's a book or it's a newsletter, that's why I love writing a weekly newsletter specifically,
is because there's never an idea that I can't utilize.
Right? I can listen to... I don't know if you've experienced this, but when you have a project, you can listen like you're on a walk.
You listen to an audio book or a YouTube lecture, completely different from what the topic
of that thing you're working on is.
And it will still give you ideas for the project.
Yeah.
It's always pulling back across whatever your focus is captured by, whether it was an argument
with your mom yesterday or whatever, it's weird.
You are right.
It's like a, I know a shape shifting poltergeist or something that
create it moves into the form.
It fills the size of the bottle of whatever it is that you're doing.
You've got a tweet about discipline saying you want disciplined because
you keep putting yourself in environments that give you a chance to be undisciplined.
Is this about environment design?
Yes, to an extent where it's environment design and just that, making it
difficult to be undisciplined.
So if you have trouble with your phone in the morning, then put it in another room.
I've never really done that or had to do that, but I know it's a common piece of advice
and it probably works for that exact reason, right?
At least you get up and then you realize,
hey, I don't do this.
Same thing with putting unhealthy foods in your pantry
or just buying them in general.
You're probably-
Can't eat the foods that you don't have in the house.
Exactly, yeah.
So yes, that's the main thing thing is environment design for that tweet.
You had another one as well, which kind of feels a little similar as we start to talk about direction in life and stuff.
Your potential is determined by how much uncertainty you're willing to embrace.
Why?
Oh, that kind of, uh, contradicts what we said about creativity thriving within constraints.
What I mean by that is the progressive overload of uncertainty and responsibility, where if
you just throw yourself into the middle of the ocean, you can maybe learn to swim, but
you probably won't if you don can maybe learn to swim, but you probably
won't if you don't know how to swim before.
It's not going to be a very good time and you're definitely not going to quote unquote
reach your potential there.
But what I mean by that is now if you were to look back on what was uncertain previously
in your life, it no longer is.
So what I mean by that is you're gradually expanding what
is known to you into the unknown. You're taking those steps into the unknown, allowing your
mind to sit and marinate in that thing, in that slight amount of uncertainty that is
kind of more empowering than it is the opposite. And that's when your mind can grow the most. Think of that as we'll call it your edge, right?
Living at your edge, pushing into the unknown in the gym, that's representative of pushing close to
or near failure or to failure. It's when you're lean bulking, it's eating 200 calories over. It's
very difficult to stay at that specific place and not put on the extra
weight because you want to ego lift or not eat over because you're just hungry
or can't control yourself. Right.
That's where you're making the most progress that what is the most
fulfilling, but that's a difficult place to be.
And the way you can kind of filter for that is boredom or anxiety or
boredom and uncertainty where if you feel yourself getting anxious that usually means that you're
Punching above your weight in a sense
The task is too challenging for you and you don't have the knowledge skill or clarity to make sense of the path to get there
So when people set these
High and hard goals, but they don't have any of the path to get there. So when people set these high and hard goals,
but they don't have any of the puzzle pieces
to make sense of that with their mind,
then it's extremely uncertain to them.
But once they reach that goal, looping back to the quote,
they've kind of been able to umbrella that
or make sense of that picture
so they can hold more uncertainty in their
minds because one last thing with that is the more you do this the less
the more experience you have let's say you're at level 50 or let's say you're
at level 1 when you're at level 1 you wouldn't face a level 10 say you're at level one, when you're at level one, you wouldn't face a level 10. Right. You're probably going to get one-shotted, but if you are a level 50,
you can probably hold your own against the level 60. Like the decrease in challenge as
you're going more and more becomes ever so slight. How should people figure out what they want out of
life? You know, we have insights about, oh, you know, they can live with this uncertainty,
but I don't really know, but there is an literal unlimited amount of optionality
for everybody to choose the direction.
And that's only getting more.
Uh, what's your advice for people who want to figure out where they want to go?
Yeah.
for people who want to figure out where they want to go.
Yeah.
I like to think of it in terms of solving an infinite string of problems in your life,
where there is a most pressing problem in your life right now.
And by solving that you at least start to gain some kind of footing.
If we were to extrapolate that out and see what that picture looked like over a long enough time scale right now, I feel slow.
I feel sluggish.
It's impacting my relationships.
It's impacting my ability to focus at work.
I should do something about that first, right?
I should focus on solving that problem.
A problem implies that there is a goal.
You don't necessarily need to create a goal,
but there is a goal there.
And at least you start moving in a better direction.
As you move forward with that, more meaningful,
challenging, and deeper problems start to uncover. It's like when you start in the gym for vanity but then you stay for the therapy in a sense where.
You start going to the gym because you wanna look good and someone in high school broke up with you or something like that you wanna get back at them but then as you get into it two three years.
two, three years, the progress starts to slow down and you need to solve a newer problem of like, okay, where did my fulfillment in that specific thing come from?
And you have to start to develop some kind of philosophical sense of mastery around the
gym in and of itself.
That's kind of the progression.
To answer the question that always comes up there with, okay, well, first, I don't know
what problem to solve. And two, I'm still not motivated to solve that problem because my mind isn't in
the place where that is important to me yet.
It's not an automatic decision to go and do that thing or create that new
habit or whatever it may be to that.
We need to create a frame for your mind to operate within, kind of like a worldview,
your own little world that you can start to piece together the map of.
So what I like to do there, and this is a practice where you're going to take 10, 20,
30 minutes, however long it takes to create an anti-vision for your future.
And this isn't set in stone.
This is like a minimum viable anti-vision right now.
It's something that you just want to,
you want to plant a flag in the ground
and you want to come back to it,
to add to and refine to it.
In order to do this,
you're just trying to contemplate
and think of experiences
that you never want to experience again. you're trying to reflect on the things that you may have passed over and you probably did pass over.
In your past that were rather painful but as you can just let time go on.
That pain equalized and now it's no longer painful to you. So first reflect on those things.
What do you not want?
What is your anti-ideal future?
Write all of those things down, just anything.
Write it all down.
There's no specific way to do that.
Come back to it when you need to.
After that, create the opposite side of the frame.
So the vision, what are the things that you want?
What are the things that you want to experience again? Again, the first iteration of this is probably just going to be some kind of delusion. In a year,
you're going to be like, what was I thinking? But that's the purpose of iterating, refining,
evolving. Right now, the only purpose of this frame is to reorient your mind to perceive new opportunities and ideas where if you weren't aware of it
previously or if you didn't previously have a conscious top of mind goal of making, let's
use a fitness exam of getting a six pack and avoiding getting a six pack for your vision
and avoiding feeling sluggish
overweight just not liking how you look in the mirror.
That's kind of like a push pull between the two.
Now with that on your mind, you're at least able to pick apart more things in your
everyday experience. When you're scrolling on social media, now you're going to see
that post of
some useful piece of fitness information that you would have scrolled past before. You're
going to follow that person. The algorithm is going to start to cater toward that specific
interest. You're going to be recommended a book. You're going to purchase that book.
You'll probably read a chapter, but then you'll go down this other rabbit hole of Mike Isretel
on YouTube and don't do that. Do you, God?
Yeah.
But then you really get into it and then you start to develop this love for this one specific
thing and when you start to repeat that for the different domains of your life over years
of health, wealth, relationships, happiness, whatever it may be, then you can really start
to make sense
of this bigger picture and refine that frame over time.
So it's less about here's a specific path to take
and more about here's the direction
you don't wanna move in,
here's the direction you kind of want to move in.
Now let's just start solving problems along the way
and see where trial and error
takes us because you're probably not going to end up in a bad spot if you are
doing that. And even now it's like, I don't,
I still don't necessarily know what I want out of life, right?
I have a very good idea that I hold high conviction in and I'm going to pursue,
but I'm also open to that changing. So that may be another piece of the puzzle is just don't have these high expectations like you need to know what you need to do.
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That's nomadic.com slash modern wisdom. Yeah. I love the idea of, uh, writing out what you don't want your life to be like.
George had this thought experiment years ago, which was, uh, how do you
make a miserable person happy?
You're like, I'm not too sure.
You're okay.
How do you make a happy person miserable?
It's like piece of piss.
So I think, you know, inversion is just such a powerful tool with things like that.
Everybody knows, uh, well, you know, go through this little list of things that you can do to make a happy person miserable? It's like piece of piss. So I think, you know, inversion is just such a powerful tool with things like that.
Everybody knows, uh, well, I, you know, go through this little list of things,
disconnect them from their friends and remove them from any work that gives
them a sense of meaning and mess with their sleep, I'd mess with their food.
I wouldn't let them see any sunlight.
I wouldn't let them train to exercise.
You know, okay.
Those are the things that make a happy person miserable.
The very bare minimum.
Like that.
Okay.
That's, that's the things that you need in order to.
So, you know, I had this insight about depression that basically if you're
not covering those building blocks, how would you make a happy person miserable?
You really shouldn't be looking at the serotonin balance that's inside of your
brain and how much is this to do with being exposed to microplastics and so on and so forth.
It's like, Hey, fucking dude, like you need to form some foundation or
else basically what you're doing is maybe laying at the feet of something
far more complex, a problem, which is way more simple and
significantly easier to fix.
Uh, but yeah, uh, I'd never thought about inverting it for where do
you want your life to end up or not?
I did this, um, annual review, uh, that template that I gave, uh, gave out for free.
And, um, one of the questions is what would I do to make 85 year old me miserable?
Oh, wow.
And that's not too dissimilar.
That was good.
Yeah.
What does 85 year old me wish that I did more of what does 85 year old me wish
that I did less of, and, uh year old me wish that I did less of?
And that's not too dissimilar to what you're talking about here.
If I know what's that thing about,
tell me where I'm going to die so that I can never go there.
It's like, tell me the life that I don't want to lead so I can avoid doing it.
Hmm. I have a question for you there.
Is...
Do you see, I know it's hard to create some kind of blanket statement for this,
but in your eyes, are there those foundational habits that every single person should do?
And then the fulfillment and creativity comes from kind of dancing between those and doing
their own thing? Or is there leeway there?
It depends how rigidly you define what it is that you do.
You know, like you wouldn't let the person exercise while there's, you
know, a million different types of exercise for some one person, it's
dancing for one person, it's doing yoga for another, it's lifting weights.
Somebody wants to do it on their own.
Somebody wants to do it in a group.
Someone wants to do it at night.
Someone wants to do it during the day.
Someone wants to do it outside. Someone wants to do it inside. You know, there's do it in a group, someone wants to do it at night, someone wants to do it during the day,
someone wants to do it outside, someone wants to do it inside.
You know, there's a lot of different ways to sort of slice and dice this.
And it ends up as with most debates, just becoming a semantic game.
Like what do you actually specifically mean by exercise?
And what do you actually mean by enough sleep?
Who even says what enough is?
But I think ultimately, if you're not sleeping enough, if you're eating poorly consistently, if you are not getting some form of exercise that
makes you feel good, if you're not going outside and seeing at least a little
bit of sunlight or daylight, if you live in Iceland or whatever, and if you're
not working on something that gives you a sense of connection to the world and
sense of purpose, at least you're contributing to making the world a little
bit of a better place.
And if you're doing all of it on your own, like I, Godspeed,
being able to get through that.
Um, so yes, I would say maybe there's a, basically for the more of those things
that you're not taking off the box of, you need to become an increasing outlier
on the tail end of not normal in order to be
able to say that you are living a good life or in order to be able to be sufficiently
resilient.
Most people and especially the biggest chunk of most people in the middle of the bell curve,
they need most or all of those.
And you need to be a supremely unique individual to be able to say, yeah, man, you know, I
just crush it.
I mean, I never see my friends and I eat Bud eat Budweiser and Domino's and, you know,
some days I sleep for 10 hours and some days I sleep for two and I don't really
exercise at all and not that connected to my work, but life's good.
Uh, that you are a, a particularly unique individual if that's the way that you,
uh, the way that you show up.
Yeah, I agree.
And I think it goes for the, the other end too, where right now building
software, a lot of the team has those habits, but in the opposite direction
where like not even by my design or encouragement of it, I actively
encourage the opposite, but, uh but they're like the cracked startup engineers
that you'll see on Twitter where they're just working till 3 a.m. because that's what they
love to do. They love to code and they love to just work together and be friends. And I've also
noticed that in my life where when you are working on that one thing and you're going all in on it,
it's that intensity phase. Other areas of your life do kind of have to peel back.
I think the wisdom there is not letting them completely fall off or finding a
lower baseline that you can maintain of those things.
Oliver Berkman has got this prompt from 4,000 weeks where he says, decide in
advance what you're going to suck at.
And, um, it's a really good one because if you focus all of your attention on
one thing, you make more progress in that thing than if you spent three times the
amount of time on that thing, but with only a third of the attention, you sort
of accumulate more, it's not, it's not a linear progression of more time on the
thing and more focus equals the same amount it's spread with less focus over
more time.
That's not the way it works.
If you focus exclusively on health and the gym for six months, you make way more
progress than 50% of that attention for a year.
And the same thing goes for businesses and skill acquisition and so on and so forth.
There's this sort of weird compounding.
There's a kind of obsession that causes you to focus on the little minutiae that
you might've missed.
Typically you're allowing it to sort of become part of your personality.
So the, the, um, momentum is harder to slow down after a while.
It sort of keeps you going and keeps you going.
It's a part of you.
You feel like it's very personal to you.
And, um, yeah, you, you end up in this place where so, so many of the results
that you wanted to get over the long-term can be
achieved more quickly by focusing, but the problem is that you feel that fall away.
You feel the drop-off of, well, you know, I said, I was going to work on my business
this year and, and, and, or I was going to get a promotion at work or I was going to
build a family or get a girlfriend or do whatever it is, but my body's looking a
little bit off.
It's like, yeah, dude, you're doing 12 hour days at work, or you're going out
three nights a week trying to socialize and find a partner, or you're doing, you
know, whatever it is that you're doing, there are, there are no solutions.
There are only trade-offs.
And I think in advance identifying to yourself, what are the
trade-offs I'm prepared to trade?
Like, I want to do this thing.
I want to 2025, I want to get a promotion at work. I want to move out of the house. I want to 2025, I want to get a promotion at work.
I want to move out of the house.
I want to get, I want to move into a new place.
Okay.
What are the things you need to do in order to be able to do that?
You already thought about that.
Okay.
And what are the things that you're going to need to pay a cost of?
Well, maybe I'm not going to be able to go out as much.
So maybe I'm going to feel a little bit more lonely.
Maybe some of my friends are going to stop hanging around with me because
I can't pay them enough attention to sort of keep them feeling like we've
got this connection going, uh, okay.
Well, am I prepared to pay that price?
Because most people stop doing things.
I think because of the pain that's come along with the byproduct of them, not
the lack of progress that they're making.
It's all of the other things that stop that it's like the, the most salient
thing is the discomfort of other shit dropping off as well as the discomfort
of what you're trying to do now that requires a lot more attention and you
need to manage both of those wells at the same time.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
It's fun when, when that happens because you, I don't know, you kind of prove yourself
wrong in a lot of ways where the most progress that I've made in the gym was actually like
two years ago rather than 10 when I first started simply because I just refound an obsession
with that one thing, focused on it for six months and
surprised myself with a lot of progress just because I was so meticulous about that one thing.
But then everything else took a backseat.
And another even further thing with that is if you get into the habit of doing that,
it's a lot harder to pick steam back up in something like work if that took a backseat.
Yeah, that is interesting. You that took a backseat. Hmm.
Yeah, that is interesting.
You've got another tweet that I liked.
If you never contradict yourself, you're probably too attached to a limiting
belief and it's holding you back from reaching the next level.
People don't like contradicting themselves.
The internet fucking hates hypocrisy.
You know, it's like catnip to, well, you once said this, but now you've said that.
Uh, and we also don't like it being called out in ourselves, right?
Uh, it seems it's half a step away from being called a liar.
Um, so why should we be contradicting ourselves more?
If we draw a person's life out as a book or the, let's say a song.
What people like to do is they like to focus on one specific lyric or word of
the song and act like that's the entire person in and of themselves or an image.
They like to zoom in on the pixel of an image and act like that makes up the entirety of their being,
right?
But the thing about a song specifically is that it continuously evolves.
Another example of that would be an index fund, right?
One stock can be down, but the index fund can be up.
And the people love to focus on the stock being down.
And that's all they can see rather than zooming out and saying, Oh,
okay, in the big picture, in the actual story of this thing,
if I'm trying to think in stories,
instead of just words or phrases that this person has said at one point in their
life, then it makes a lot more sense.
And I can see their growth and development and I
can, uh,
actually pull something from this and potentially change my own beliefs.
But that's the problem in and of itself is that you don't want to.
And those beliefs are causing you to narrow your attention on that one tiny
little thing that when you actually think about it,
it doesn't matter in the slightest.
And you're going to forget about it in 10 minutes. And your anger was for nothing.
How important is writing as a practice for you for sort of getting all of these realizations together? Obviously it's something that you do professionally, but how important do you think
those insights are even for people who don't
have a blog that they need to be publishing to?
It is extremely important because I don't see, I don't see, when you think of writing,
when people hear the word writing just now, they're going to think, oh, they're not explicitly
going to think this, but words are going to come to their mind of, okay, English degrees, academic writing, uh, grammar, punctuation, grammar, Nazis, all of these different things.
When that's not what writing is, writing is writing. Just think of texting your friend. You text your friends every day. Maybe if you have friends, you write in some way you write emails whatever it may be I
want you to think of that and things like journaling as a way to practice
thinking specifically because writing is thinking on paper it's organized
thinking that you can break apart you can redo You can be very intentional with it in your mind. It's kind of it's not
an actual canvas. It's just something you're like swimming through and it's very difficult
to find one coherent line of thought or create one long coherent line of thought. There's
absolutely no way that you're going to write a book in your head. So by putting your words on paper and starting to understand how you think, and then starting to,
you could say reprogram that you are doing just that in your head, you're reprogramming the way that you think in
hopefully a way that is beneficial toward ideal outcomes.
So that's reason number one.
that is beneficial toward ideal outcomes. So that's reason number one. The second reason is that I see writing personally as a skill that amplifies any other skill that you could
acquire. Therefore, I see it as a very good first thing to learn very fundamental skills of human nature, psychology, persuasion,
potentially marketing, depending on the medium of the writing, sales in many cases for copywriting,
different types of writing.
It's communication.
Anything that you want to get out of life, you're probably going to be communicating, persuading,
offering value, exchanging value with another person. And the written word is the base form
of media that allows you to do that thing. So by practicing it and stacking skills on top of it,
it can be extremely powerful while also being a way to reshape your entire mind. And if your language that you use
paves how far your thoughts can go,
then that's extremely powerful
in not only your decision-making,
but in whatever potential you have in life.
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Yeah. I, uh, you know, started this newsletter thing that I do, um, four and a half years ago,
I think. And, um, I think I've missed a week since then. So we're on whatever edition 250,
some shit like that. And, uh, even as somebody that speaks a lot all the time, uh, to people that are
way smarter than me, the process of writing that newsletter has become better over
time.
Like it's reliably my favorite part of the week.
And I'm aware this is every guy with a f*****g substack ever going like, bro,
you got to get on substack.
Uh, but the reason I think for me was I struggled so much to
ever keeping up sort of a deep journaling practice beyond something
that was very structured, you know, like a six minute journal, five
minute diary type thing, um, the artists pages or morning pages by Julia
Cameron or whatever was just, I really struggled with that And, um, I need a lot of social pressure to get myself to, to do hard things,
especially new hard things.
So CrossFit was a great example.
Started doing CrossFit.
You don't quit in the middle of the workout because there's 15 other people
who are all doing it with you and they're going to look at you and you're going to,
they're going to look at you weird.
So you use the social pressure, you externalize and outsource your
sense of motivation to the group.
And, um, you know, if you weird. So you use the social pressure, you externalize and outsource your sense of motivation to the group.
And, um, you know, if you say it's called three minute Monday.
And Tuesday rolls around and there's been no email.
Well, what about all the, all the people that were expecting email on a Monday?
So given that, uh, it was the first time that I actually had a consistent writing
practice and you know, it's informed so much.
I think you're right as well.
You do a, you're going weekly too, right?
Once a week.
Yep.
Yep.
And, uh, for me, that cadence is, is really beautiful because I always
have something to write about.
I never don't have something to write about.
And sometimes I have more to write about than I want to write about,
but it never feels arduous.
I get to a Friday or a Saturday,
I'm like, fuck, like I can't wait.
I can't, what have I got this week?
I've got my note.
And again, you know, struck, I can open the,
open my pants and show you what I've got lurking inside,
which is just a huge, huge fuck off single note
with random links and bits of insight.
It could be way more organized.
I'm sure I could, I could have a better system, but this one works and it's
lightweight and I've used it for, you know, quarter of a million words.
So sue me and dude, I love it.
I love it.
I it's helped me personally.
It's helped me professionally.
Um, it gives me ideas and stories to talk about over dinner.
Uh, it's, you know, made me reflect on things from my childhood.
It gives me space to say, yeah, you know, I, I had this, I had this rule that I came
up with about five years ago that everybody should have a podcast in that for half an
hour a week, put your phone on the table, press the record button and talk to a friend
about a topic that you care about. Because very few people have a focused conversation on one topic.
And I think it's therapeutic.
I found it kind of, I found this kind of conversation when I started
guesting on podcasts eight years ago, I found it really therapeutic in a way
that was like being thirsty without knowing that I needed a drink.
And writing is actually the same.
So I've, I haven't said it yet, but I'm slowly veering toward everybody
should start to sub stack, even if they have no intention of sharing it.
Um, just cause it's, it's really, really good.
If you're finding that your thoughts are messy, if you like ideas and you keep
playing with them, but they're always up here, uh, you know, I think you've got,
you, I saw a tweet from you that was something to do with, um, you're not making as much personal development progress as you
want because all of your ideas for personal development are locked in your
head as opposed to doing the one thing that could actually move you towards,
uh, achieving your goals.
And it's kind of the same with this.
You've got all of these ideas and they're just sort of lurking around here.
And until you've got it to be able to reference somewhere, what are you going to do?
You're just going to keep thinking about it.
You know what it's like.
That's, I mean, this is the ruthless thing about missing persons, right?
What did the family say?
I just want to know.
We just want to know where they are.
And your brain is saying, I just want to know where this fucking idea is.
Like, I just want to know.
And you go, it's still in the brain.
You go, yeah, I know.
So I need to keep reminding you of it in case you forget once it's down on a piece
of paper, you sort of liberated to think about new different ideas.
Yeah.
I find it quite interesting how everyone says that where I think writing is
important because it is a part of my identity, right?
I'm going to talk about it a lot because it is for you it's podcasting or starting
like a smaller version of the podcast.
What's interesting to me is that for almost any creator,
they would say the same thing in whatever medium they have.
So while it may be writing, while it may be speaking in some kind of fashion,
I think just creating something,
being able to synthesize the ideas in your head,
being able to take out some of the ideas that are stuck in your brain, organize them in some way that you think is beneficial to the world and giving it to them solves a good amount of those, uh, not basic needs, but meaning needs.
but meaning needs by a long shot. And there's so many different connected ideas there in ways of doing that. Like you said, there's a hundred different ways to exercise. Are you
going to do it inside outside? Are you going to do CrossFit, running, walking, jujitsu, whatever it
may be with creating you, you do that with any interest that you have. And that's what's so fun and fascinating about it is it's just, uh, giving yourself
permission to explore those interests and do something with them.
It's less about reading just to read and you don't see any benefit out of it.
Now you have something to do with it.
I mean, you know, one of the most common questions or insights that came from the
live shows was some thing along the line of how do I better remember the things
that I learn and read?
And, you know, the problem is you don't have a reason to fucking remember them.
That's your issue.
Your issue is why do you need to remember them other than trying to be more
interesting at the water cooler or for some vague sense of personal development?
You have no outlet.
There's no reason, there's no pressure being applied to the system to constrain it or cause you to do it.
So if you don't have a reason to do it, why should I get fit and go, if you
didn't know, or if, if, here's a good one.
If it wasn't the case that training in the gym had any bearing on health or
wellbeing or the way that you felt or
how attracted people were to you.
How many people do you think would do it?
Almost none, right?
Because it's hard and it sucks and there's basically no benefit.
So the benefit to you is way less salient when it's this vague idea of I will become
a better, more mindful, more insightful, wisdom-y person.
No, I've got to write a thousand words this weekend.
That's that'll apply some pressure to you.
Yeah.
Uh, Naval put out a tweet recently and it said something along the lines of,
if you don't, if you didn't, man, what was it?
It was, if you didn't, man, what was it? It was if you didn't, if you don't, if there wasn't a reason to remember it, then
you shouldn't want to remember it.
Something of that line of thought where he was saying, you don't need to, if you
needed to remember it, you would.
And trying to memorize anything is kind of.
Against the point to Ferris is gonna be a cold the good shit sticks.
I know it's not to dissimilar basically that it's not it's not your job to find a book interesting it's the books job to be interesting to you and if you read.
to be interesting to you.
And if you read 200 pages of some book and you go, well, nothing stood out to me. Or I can't remember anything.
You go, well, maybe nothing was sufficiently impressive or interesting or, or resonant
with you to warrant you remembering anything.
That's not a you problem.
That's a book problem.
Yeah.
That's changed how I view and read books where I don't really sit and read entire books over the course of a few
sessions, of course. I usually am hunting for ideas that I can utilize or write down or the ones that
I will remember, and I don't pay attention to too much else where if I can use it as a portion of
my writing or I can weave it in somewhere here, or I can make sense of this abstract worldview that I was trying to integrate
with my own then perfect.
But the other things in the book,
me trying to study and memorize and be able to recite those things again,
or like you said,
so I can sound smart to someone else that is kind of against the point.
Back here.
Danco, ladies and gentlemen, Dan, dude, I really appreciate you.
I think, um, this blending of, of productivity, creativity, discipline
with sort of freedom and simplicity is, uh, it's good.
It's a much needed redress.
Where should people go?
They want to check out the things you've written and the work you do.
Why should you send them?
Yeah, just thedanco.com.
Everything's there.
Dude.
Heck yeah.
This was awesome.
I really appreciate the opportunity.
No, my pleasure, dude.
Until next time.