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notjoshjames | 2 years ago

This year, I've been trying a variation of "morning pages" where I'll take a 15-30m walk and speak with myself. I use a pair of old Beats around my neck, which have surprisingly good noise cancellation, and Otter for transcription (moving to a local Whisper workflow soon).

I've A/B tested this against using a text editor, with the control as doing nothing in the morning, and at least for me personally, I find I'm practically itching to sit down and write more or edit my spoken thoughts before I'm even finished with my walk.

I'm generally more motivated and productive on days I begin with this routine. I think it's all about getting momentum for your brain; once there's a flow of output, it tends be much easier to direct or filter that flow in whichever directions you choose.

I still work to reduce friction and lower the activation energy when sparking output, but there is very much a discipline component here. I know plenty of executives that use daily standups or assistants in lieu of a mental morning routine... I wonder if future personalized language models may help?

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RedditKon|2 years ago

Out of curiosity - what are you actually doing on these walks? You're talking outloud to yourself and then editing later or what?

notjoshjames|2 years ago

Typically, I run through lists like to-dos for companies/projects, the day's agenda, topics/ideas, recollection of the previous day, reflection on mental and emotional state.

Some days are more structured than others, and I don't try to conform too tightly to any particular structure. The goal is to get my brain outputting something, and later in my morning I'll transform or rewrite whatever I spit out. During very busy or demanding periods this also ends up functioning as my primary daily journal entry.