Change your life with time management
>> Saturday, February 16, 2019
LIFE POINTERS
Is
the secret of productivity really just doing what you enjoy?
By far the biggest
predictor of whether something gets done is whether it’s fun to do
The problem with the
genre of “life lessons from the world’s most successful entrepreneurs” is one
of causal direction: just because Elon Musk works 120
hours a week, it doesn’t follow that if you work 120 hours a week,
you’ll experience Musk’s success. (Whether or not Musk has an enviable life
isn’t the point here; that depends on your enthusiasm for space travel
and defaming
cave divers.)
Musk works insane hours
because he wants to. We can argue about the psychological roots of
that wanting: does it stem from a big-hearted desire to help humanity, or a pathological
workaholism and desperation to prove himself? But either way, in some sense,
Musk likes it; whereas if you tried to follow that schedule, you’d
have to make yourself do it. The same applies to less extreme advice. “Write
every day” won’t work unless you want to write. And no exercise regime will
last long if you don’t at least slightly enjoy what you’re doing.
This clicked into place
for me as I read about the hyper-productive German
sociologist Niklas Luhmann, in a fascinating book called How To Take Smart Notes by Sönke
Ahrens (based on the intricate index card system Luhmann used to organise his
knowledge). How did Luhmann publish 58 books and hundreds of articles – plus,
impressively, several more books after his 1998 death, thanks to manuscripts he
left behind? Because, said Luhmann,
“I never force myself to
do anything I don’t like. Whenever I am stuck, I do something else.” That
sounds scandalously self-indulgent – except that, as Ahrens writes, “doesn’t it
make much more sense that the impressive body of work was produced not in spite
of the fact he never made himself do anything he didn’t feel like, but because
of it?”
I’ve experimented with
countless time-management techniques, but the results leave me forced to agree:
by far the biggest predictor of whether something gets done is whether it’s fun
to do. The secret of productivity is simple: just do what you enjoy.
Oh, you have some
objections? Thought so. A big one is the fear that if we just let ourselves do
what we enjoy, we’d waste (even more) hours each day on social media, or eating
Nutella from the jar, instead of doing what mattered. There’s some limited
truth to this: when you’re just beginning a session of challenging work, you
often need to give yourself a push, reminding yourself you don’t need to “feel
like” starting in order to start. But after that, it’s enjoyment that’ll sustain
your motivation, not productivity techniques. Indeed, they can make things
worse: if you tell yourself you must spend, say, four hours every day on a
certain project, come hell or high water, you’re liable to turn something that
once inspired you into something you can’t bear to do.
The other big
objection is that countless people don’t have the luxury of enriching,
meaningful work, so they can hardly organise their days by focusing on what
feels good. This is true. But it’s not a problem with Luhmann’s enjoyment-based
approach to productivity. It’s a problem with society –
the kind of problem, in other words, that no productivity technique is ever going
to fix.
No Sweat, by the
behavioral scientist Michelle Segar, advocates an enjoyment-focused philosophy
of exercise, arguing that goals like “staying healthy” are too abstract to work
– the habits that stick are the ones you find fun. (Oliver Burkeman
is a writer of the US-based newspaper The Guardian)
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