In all of life, there were two or three things worse than February in Indiana. Maybe four. No more than that, though.
Notes on Creativity
Literary constellations: Mapping the first sentences from the chapters of famous books.
More here: www.c82.net
Mess for Success
The psychological benefits of giving up on cleaning and embracing the mess – Quartz
One fascinating study conducted in the early 1980s examined the well-worn question (well-worn amongst productivity geeks that is) of how structured one should make a calendar. Some people think that if you want to get something done, you should block out a time to do it on the calendar. Others think that the calendar should be reserved only for fixed appointments, and that everything else should be a movable feast.
The study, run by the psychologists, Daniel Kirschenbaum, Laura Humphrey and Sheldon Malett explored this question, asked undergraduates to participate in a study-skills course. Some were advised to set out monthly goals and study activities; others were told to plan activities and goals in much more detail, day by day.
The researchers assumed (paywall) that the well-structured daily plans would work better than the rather amorphous monthly plans. But the researchers were wrong: the daily plans were catastrophically demotivating, while the monthly plans worked very nicely. The effect was still in evidence a year later. The likely explanation is that the daily plans simply became derailed by unexpected events. A rigid structure is inherently fragile. Better for both your peace of mind and your productivity to improvise a little more often.
Let’s go ahead and name Will as a “person of interest” for all recent disappearances.
Quote
That’s it, I guess. Just go on living, whether you feel like it or not.
Toss-off Poem #121: Oh Yeah
“Nothing is more disturbing
than your fourteen-year-old son
creeping up behind you
and saying, ‘Paint me
like one of your French girls’”
is what I was going to tweet,
but then I remembered
reality.
Planned Parenthood CEO to Pence: “Dude, how can you possibly believe that this is real?”
From an Indianapolis Star interview with the retiring CEO of Planned Parenthood of Indiana:
Q: If you had 10 minutes with Vice President Mike Pence, what would you say?
A: I cannot understand how anybody in today’s world thinks it is possible for abstinence to work. How does he think it is actually possible to suggest to the world that you will limit your sexual activity to when you’re married and actually prepared to be a parent? Centuries of reality would tell you differently.
And the fact of the matter is, if you truly wanted to reduce abortion, you do that by reducing unintended pregnancy, and the barriers don’t do it. They introduce risk and danger to women. So that would’ve been my question to him: “Dude, how can you possibly think that this is real?”
Small talk makes me miserable. After 15 seconds, I want to hit “skip ad” and get on to the interesting stuff.