Why write something yourself when someone else has already articulated it better than you could ever articulate? Concluding statements from Aaron Swartz’s 2007 talk, How to Get a Job Like Mine (emphasis mine)―
Be curious. Read widely. Try new things. I think a lot of what people call intelligence just boils down to curiosity.
Say yes to everything. I have a lot of trouble saying no, to an pathological degree — whether to projects or to interviews or to friends. As a result, I attempt a lot and even if most of it fails, I’ve still done something.
Assume nobody else has any idea what they’re doing either. A lot of people refuse to try something because they feel they don’t know enough about it or they assume other people must have already tried everything they could have thought of. Well, few people really have any idea how to do things right and even fewer are to try new things, so usually if you give your best shot at something you’ll do pretty well.
I followed these rules. And here I am today, with a dozen projects on my plate and my stress level through the roof once again.
Every morning I wake up and check my email to see which one of my projects has imploded today, which deadlines I’m behind on, which talks I need to write, and which articles I need to edit.
Maybe, one day, you too can be in the same position. If so, I hope I’ve done something to help.
Almost exactly my morning routine. It’s more fun than you could ever imagine – I start new projects in the middle of writing a blogpost, I work on existing projects only when I really feel like it, I don’t respond to emails (sorry!), I never get anything done. Strangely, I’m optimistic that someday, all my projects will get completed. Either that or by then, they won’t matter to me.
~ Voices ~
You should probably write something here…
~ Add your voice ~