Lgmtest

Hat tip to Bucky Fuller.

Maxing out your Triangle

November 17, 2008

ADS by FUSION

I find that most people take on new jobs, projects and hobbies for three reasons:

  1. To learn something new
  2. To pay the bills
  3. Because they love doing it

These three things fulfill some of our very basic needs — they give us stability, excitement, ways to contribute and opportunities to grow. If you’re with me so far, then allow me to present exhibit A, the love-growth-cash triangle:

blank love-growth-cash triangle

Here’s where some common activities could fall on our chart:

entry-level job, shit job that pays the rent, hobby plotted on triangle

Some people might ascribe to the philosophy that it’s okay to be at a well-paid-yet-crappy day job and use the remaining time and money enjoying your hobbies. I disagree. Here’s why — if you combine the two triangles, you get the following:

overlay of hobby and shit job on triangle

In other words, you end up missing out on pieces of the bigger (triangular) pie. There’s a certain joy that comes from doing what you love, getting compensated for it and constantly learning new things in the process. Your goal should be to maximize each experience and try to cover as many new areas of the bigger triangle as possible.

If you have a shit job, come up with new ways to learn something out of it. If you have a hobby you’re super-excited about, try to turn it into a business. If you’re just starting a new gig, instill it with something you’re passionate about.

max out the triangle!

Do it.

Re-evaluate everything you’re working on. Grab a pen right now and draw a triangle for every job, project and hobby. Take a good hard look at each one. What can you do to get more out of that experience? If it’s not helping you max out the bigger triangle, drop it and find something else to spend your time on.

Discuss

Jan 2008

Feb

Starting anew

Less talk, more do.

51 ways to change your life

Are lists really as useful as they seem?

Mar

Routines for Creativity

Think creativity can thrive without structure? Think again.

Apr

May

Jun

Jul

The Illness

A quick hypothetical.

Aug

Working Life

Why retiring at the age of 65 might not be such a good idea.

Idea: So easy, mom can do it.

Techy stuff explained in plain english.

Sep

How to remember stuff

My memory sucks, and it's all the iPhone's fault.

Risk-inverse

When the sky is falling, stay outside.

Idea: Judge books by their cover

See how good your snap judgements are.

Stuff I love: Muji Chronotebook

Day planners suck. But this is no ordinary day planner.

Oct

How many gallons?

An Obama-inspired miniproject.

Presidential Teas

A new collaboration. Taking orders til election day.

On Permanence

Or, how I learned to stop worrying and love my printer.

Nov

Passion Projects

A new kind of travel site and some observations on doing what you love.

Maxing out your Triangle

Rethinking work-hard/play-hard.

Dec

Time on your side

Conquering your intimidating to-do list.

StickyScreen

A digital post-it for your web browser.

Jan 2009

Buckminster Fuller's Universe

An operating strategy for years to come.

In Praise of Lo-Fi

Contemplations at 30,000 feet.

Feb

Mar

Denial

See also: hope, optimism, positivity.

Apr

Steepster

On tea and tech.

Doing the Dishes

...and liking it.

May

Jun

The Value of Certainty, Part 2

And the definition of risk.

Jul

Aug

Sep

30 Minutes a Day

How to make long-term memory work in your favor.

Oct

Nov

Roulette

New York, Michigan and Pattern-seeking

Dec

Jan 2010

More Fun at MJR

On local theaters and participation hooks.

Feb

Mar