focus is fractal
i also am heading to get fairly a bit to say about consideration management in general, especially on the subject of the concept that focus is fractal.
the fractal metaphor is only going to go thus far, but there are a lot of parallels among the inquiries "how long is a coastline?" and "how much consideration can you pay to something in an hour?" in both cases,
Microsoft Office 2010 Professional, the answer keeps increasing the closer you look.
in other words,
Windows 7 Product Key, interest isn't really measured in time directly but something like details per second, square-inch-seconds of brain activity, or maybe flops if you're talking about a cpu. we don't really have tools to measure it outside of mri lab (though several portable consumer eeg machines are close to market, and they come a little closer), but the point is focus management and time management are two totally different things.
also, you can't make more time but you can create more focus through the miracle of neuroplasticity.
but anyway... there'll probably be a whole chapter on that, so no point rewriting it here.
deep problems vs wide problems
the other major insight that came to me is the distinction amongst two types of problems. this kind of fits in with the fractal thought, though at the moment,
Microsoft Office 2007, the idea is still very fuzzy in my mind. in fact, it may not even be a distinction in between problems but among problem solving methods.
when i say "deep" i'm picturing a deep canyon that has been carved by millions of years of water flowing over the same course. an example would be mastering a specific skill like aikido or playing poker or painting a picture,
Office 2007 Enterprise, or developing a framework to solve a particular programming problem. or building a fully automated business.
or for example,
Microsoft Office 2010, i sometimes make the distinction among writing to explain things to myself. it doesn't matter if i ramble and take 10 pages to get there because the only thing that matters is that the problem winds up solved in my own head. it's like casting a wide net and hoping to catch something good.
but if i want to explain the concept to someone in particular, i need to go back and harvest that idea. rewriting it, simplifying the mental path for my audience and filling in the intuitive leaps.
anyway, i'm a whole lot better at the "wide" approach than at the "deep" approach. i wind up knowing a little bit about a lot of different things, but i don't have any real expertise.
that means i can look at a new problem from a bazillion different points of view, and come up with a solution rather quickly, but then i have trouble actually implementing a solution. (which, when combined with a tendency to follow lots of little tangents means i wind up with a whole slew of unimplemented ideas - the very definition of the flake effect.)
anyway, so i see now that i could benefit tremendously from working on the "deep" habits - daily practice, refinement, continuous improvement, etc.
what are my plans for the book?
well, first of all, i want to put the ideas into practice in my own life. i've made a start on that, but these are things that need to be habits, not just one-time exercises.
since this is "deep" stuff and i suck at that, there will probably be a whole lot more to write along those lines. in fact, i may wind up writing enough for a second book before i figure out how to tame the first book.
but i do want to tame the book. go back and refactor the ideas. create an actual organizing structure.
and then what? i don't know. blog about it. maybe sell it as an ebook. maybe work with some clients or start an online community so i'm sure i have a system that works for other people too.
i feel like i've got a complete concept now, and it could be a book as-is, but i don't really know if it's useful to anyone besides me, and i also don't know if it'll continue to be useful to me in the months ahead without further improvement. (i need to test it against a requisite variety of situations, as my friend leslie might say.)
anyway, my immediate goal is to use the tools i have now to get caught up on my various responsibilities, and then start working on