Regain Your Ability to Think (in 60 Minutes a Week) | Cal Newport
By Cal Newport
Summary
## Key takeaways - **Long thinking is crucial for a meaningful life**: Long thinking, the persistent and intentional application of thought toward a specific issue to create new insights, is essential for building self-understanding, producing valuable work, and avoiding tribalism. [07:56] - **Technology erodes long thinking ability**: Modern technology fragments sustained attention through hyper-palatable content and the hyperactive hive mind, while also reducing the necessity for deep processing by offering pre-refined information. [18:12], [20:17] - **The Notebook Method trains long thinking**: The Notebook Method, involving dedicated notebooks, good pens, quiet scenic locations, and focused work sessions with summaries, is a powerful training tool for regaining long thinking skills. [31:37] - **Paper facilitates creative thought**: Writing on paper allows for drawing, circling concepts, and sketching structures, which can unlock different areas of the mind compared to typing on a laptop. [35:16] - **Sustained attention is key to reading and thinking**: Reactivating reading circuits through 'minutes on page' and reducing phone usage are crucial for an 18-year-old to improve reading and build the sustained attention needed for long thinking. [46:01]
Topics Covered
- Introducing Long Thinking: The Lost Art of Deep Thought
- Deep Work vs. Long Thinking: Understanding the Distinction
- Long Thinking vs. Deep Work: A Detailed Comparison
- Single-Purpose Notebooks: Your Extension for Deep Thinking
- Intentionality: The Antidote to Modern Life's Frenetic State
Full Transcript
We often talk about the ways that
digital devices undermine our ability to
consume
complicated and meaningful information.
If you spend too much time scrolling Tik
Tok, you'll eventually start struggling
to read Holtoy.
But what about our ability to produce
complicated and meaningful information?
I'm talking about original and creative
thoughts or deep insight into yourself
or a new understanding of the wondrous
complexity of the world or exciting new
visions for what's possible. This is
what I want to get into today. Uh I'm
going to go in three parts here. In the
first part of our discussion, I'm going
to introduce an idea that I call long
thinking. I'm going to explain why I
think long thinking is critical to
creating a flourishing life. In part
two, I'll explore why specifically our
modern technological environment is
undermining our ability to perform long
thinking. And then in part three, I'm
going to present a simple but effective
training plan for regaining this
ability. Believe it or not, it's going
to be based on an idea that I first
wrote about in 2009 and have been
practicing
ever since. All right. All right. So, if
you found yourself struggling to hold a
line of thought or to make sense of
complex ideas or material, if your world
seems to have collapsed into shorter
digital takes and crudder primal
emotions, then this episode is for you.
As always, I'm Cal Newport and this is
Deep Questions.
Today's episode, the lost start of long
thinking.
All right. So, I want to start here with
an example from my own life. I'm going
to load on the screen here for people
who are watching instead of just
listening. An essay that I published on
my blog and newsletter back in the fall
of 2012. This was right at the start of
my second year as a young professor. The
title of this article was solutions
beyond the screen, the adventure work
method for producing creative insights.
Now, I've loaded this up because I have
some original photos I actually took
here. Actually, this is not my photo,
Jesse, but someone else took this photo.
I did take photos. Uh there's but this
was not one of them. So, this is a foggy
it's a foggy street uh with trees and
it's sort of desolate and romantic. This
was taken in Berkeley. All right, let me
read a little bit what I wrote here
below that picture. A couple weeks ago,
I made a brief visit to Berkeley,
California for a wedding. My wife,
Julie, had to take a conference call the
first morning after we arrived, so I
decided to get some work done myself. I
didn't bring a computer, so work
couldn't mean email replying, the
standard instinct in this situation.
Just as an aside, Jesse, there was no
smartphones back then. So, like, if you
didn't bring your computer,
>> you weren't doing work.
>> Mhm. Instead, I decided to log some hard
focus hours on what I like to call the
beast, a particularly vexing theory
problem that my collaborators and I have
been battling for many months. Another
aside, notice my use of the term hard
focus. This was actually a year or two
before I actually used a started using
the phrase deep work. I got some coffee
and headed toward the Berkeley campus on
foot. It was early and the fog was just
starting to march down the Berkeley
Hills. I eventually wandered into a
eucalyptus grove. We'll show that on the
screen. Not my photo, but I did. That's
the same grove I wandered into. Once
there, I sipped my coffee and thought.
Our existing strategy for the beast
included a complicated algorithm which
none of us looked forward to analyzing.
Deploying a trick I learned while a grad
student, I avoided needing to understand
why the complicated algorithm worked by
instead turning my attention to
understanding why simpler simpler
strategies failed. After only an hour,
which included a strategic fillup at the
free speech cafe, I had an idea for a
more concise and easier to analyze
algorithm that seemed to work. I
realized, however, uh there's a limit to
depth you can reach when keeping an idea
only in your mind. Looking to get the
most out of my new insights, and
inspired by my recent commitment to the
textbook method, I tked over to a nearby
CVS and bought a 6x9 stenographers's
notebook. I then forced myself to write
out my thoughts more formally. And there
I I here's a picture of my notes from
that day. Hey Jesse, that I did take
that photo. I'm trying to remember from
those diagrams. I can't really read the
text, but I'm trying to remember from
the diagrams exactly what problem this
was I was working on. It looks like it
was in like the local model of uh
distributed communication. But anyways,
the combination of pen and paper notes
with exotic content in which I was
working ushered in new layers of
understanding. Our battle with the beast
continues, but in the latest draft of
the solution in progress, those Berkeley
simplifications play a useful role. All
right, that's a real case study from
earlier in my professional career
and it's a type of activity that for me
had become second nature and continues
to be second nature for me but I think
is uh more rare for other people. What I
was trying to do in that story was
extract from my mind an original new
thought something that had actual value
to me and others not like a eureka
moment just like an idea out of the
blue. Oh, now what if we what if we put
ham on shoes or some sort of like a
great brainstorm like that, but a
persistent focused application of my
brain to slowly but systematically move
towards something useful and new and
then captured in a form that I could
share with others.
There's a term for this type of
cognitive activity that I was doing
there in the hills of Berkeley. Long
thinking now I think the first place I I
actually heard this term was from a
TEDex talk. It was given by the Italian
professor Giovenini Corazi Koraza who
works at the Maronei Institute for
Creativity at the University of Bolognia
where I've been I think ironically the
same year that I wrote that that uh
essay I gave a talk University of
Bolognia super old university very cool
um I want to play a clip from uh Kurza's
talk where he uses introduces this term
long thinking
we need to value long thinking normally
we talk about brilliant thinking past
thinking, deep thinking. But here we're
talking about something different. Long
thinking. What does that mean? It's some
thought that takes us far. It's as if
you were reading poetry or listening to
music. You don't judge the single notes.
You don't judge the single words. It's
the ensemble that gives you a feeling
and takes you far. We must do the same
thing with our with our concepts. We
need to go far and so we can use
association of ideas, combination of
ideas, extraction of principles and
application of those principles to areas
where they were never applied.
>> All right? So notice what he's talking
about there. Again, long thinking is not
about a sudden insight, right? It is not
about practicing something again and
again. It is about that persistent
intentional application of your brain
where you're trying to create something
new. So you're taking existing ideas,
information, you're pulling them out of
their original context, you're
reordering them, you're recombining
them, you're finding new associations.
These are all terms that Corroso used,
trying to come up with new principles or
new structures of knowledge. So, it's
like you're you're in the workshop of
your mind taking pieces that are in
there and then experimenting with
putting them together until you can
build a new useful structure.
Now, long thinking I think is so
important uh that I want to give it a a
slightly more formal definition. I'm
going to put one up here on the screen.
This is just one of many we might use.
All right. So, here's the definition
that I have up on the screen right now.
Long thinking is the persistent and
intentional application of thought
toward a specific issue, problem or idea
with the goal of creating substantial
and useful new insights.
All right, so this is something that I
want to talk about today. Now, a natural
follow-up question before we get into
the weeds about, you know, what this why
this is useful and how to be better at
it. The immediate follow-up question
that listeners of my podcast are going
to have is like, "Whoa, whoa, whoa,
whoa. This sounds a lot like deep work.
Is this just a rebranding of deep work?
What's going on here? How do these two
these two concepts relate? Well, they
are related, but they're not exactly the
same. Um, and it's worth taking a moment
to uh to explain why before we move on.
So, I'm going to put another diagram up
here on the screen. Um, so for people
who are listening, what I have up here
is a vin diagram. You have a circle
labeled long thinking. You have a circle
labeled deep work. They overlap, but not
completely. And there's different
activities that fall in different parts
uh of this particular diagram. So
certainly in the intersection of long
thinking and deep work we can find
things right like so for example this is
where you might find um you know I'm
going to put the beast right that was
the problem I talked about in my 2012
essay I just read from. It's a
professional problem that required long
persistent thinking to like slowly make
progress on. So yeah, there's a lot of
stuff in the intersection of long
thinking and deep work. But there's
other things that are over here
in the world of long thinking that are
not also deep work. Right? So for
example over here we might have you know
um
you're making sense of your life
that benefits from long thinking. You're
trying to take information you have from
your experiences and knowledge and
rebuild a new structure that makes sense
of your life but has nothing really to
do with work. Deep work is about
professional activity. Focusing without
distraction on uh professional
activities. Uh your world that's another
element that's in long think of but not
deep work. trying to make sense of your
world. Like I just I want to understand
a political concept. I want to
understand a theoretical concept. Uh I'm
you know I'm in this like workplace
seminar and people are throwing at me
like all this this terminology about
like critical theory or whatever. I want
to understand what that is. I want to
make sense of the world. I want to know
uh about specifically the trees in my
yard. There it's not deep work because
not a professional problem but it
benefits from long thinking. And then we
also have things over in deep work that
are not long thinking, right? So, you
know, we would have under this category,
for example, a big one would be I'm
going to put DP for deliberate practice.
Trying to systematically get better at
something that's demanding as I talk
about in both deep work and my book so
good they can't ignore you. That
requires deep work. You're practicing
it. So, you're focusing really intensely
and trying to push yourself past your
comfort level. It's not long thinking.
You're not creating something new.
You're not creating new thoughts. You're
not reorganizing the information in your
head in the new structures. But it does
require uh uh focus. And so it's deep
work but not long thinking, right? Um so
we have these things overlap but they're
not exactly the same. Long thinking can
take you from your career into all sorts
of other types of thoughts as pos as
well. Deep work can benefit from long
thinking but there's other types of deep
work activities that aren't long
thinking at all. The thing that unifies
long thinking is you are uh creating
something new with your brain. You are
creating something new. Whether it's
insight ideas understanding or
vision, professional or personal,
doesn't matter. It's the the the
creation of new things from the
information you already have. That is
what Barza was emphasizing in his
definition of long thinking. That's what
we're going to emphasize here.
Okay. Uh so why is long thinking
important
in the big picture? We can make big
grandiose claims about it, right? It's
what built
the world as we know it. The world that
emerged out of prehistory
and everything about it that we think
made life better than it was 100,000
years ago came out of long thinking.
We're talking technology, science,
philosophy, uh theology.
That all required long thinking. The
ability to put uh internally persistent
thought on information you had to try to
rebuild it into other structures that
could be useful to you and others. We
would still be in small bands of hunters
and foragers fighting other bands to the
death when our territories became too
crowded. if not for humans developing
the ability to do long thinking. But
that's a sort of like cultural,
historical, societal argument in favor
for this particular ability. What we
care about more today is how long
thinking is going to help you as an
individual flourish in your own life.
Now, long thinking has three big
advantages. Uh, all right. God help me,
Jess. I'm gonna draw a picture for each.
I'm gonna put my arrows here. I'll put
my arrows here. First,
I'm going to have three things and I'm
going to uh I will draw a completely
self-explanatory and fantastically
rendered photo for each. Okay, there's
three advantages that uh long thinking
gives you as the individual. All right,
so for the first, let me draw the
picture as I like to do. I like to draw
the picture first
and then see if Jesse can guess what it
is.
Jesse, is that clear what that picture
is? Somebody thinking
>> he's looking into a mirror. Oh,
>> okay.
>> Right. So, we got someone looking into a
mirror. All right. The first benefit of
long thinking is that it helps you build
over time a more nuanced and grounded
understanding of yourself.
Now, without such an understanding,
you're going to be buffeted by the
world, a conflicting ball of emotions
and reactions. Like, you're outraged.
No, you're nihilistic. No, you're you're
you're radical. No, you just you just
want to numb yourself and escape. Your
journey through life by contrast is so
much richer if you can regularly take
time to just be alone with your thoughts
then try to make sense of them move them
around recombine find associations
extract principles long thinking lets
you do that all right second advantage
which I will now also perfectly draw
all right let's see here
desk I'm giving subtly giving some oh
god oh god
oh god Jesse
I don't know what I'm doing all Right
now that's a person at a desk. Yeah,
that working.
>> Yeah.
>> All right,
that is working again.
Brilliant artwork. Um, it helps you
create useful things that impact the
world and can provide economic value,
right? All great innovation strategies
and ideas come from long thinking. If
you're adept at this, you will find a
much clearer and more rewarding sense of
purpose. So clearly this is what I was
using long thinking for in the example
from the beginning of the episode. It
was helping me figure out how to make
progress on a really complicated theory
problem that me and my collaborators
called the beast. I published a lot of
papers in 2012. So I don't know what
that was at the height of my theory
career uh earlier when I was you know a
new professor. I was publishing a lot of
papers back then. Um so I don't know
which of the papers that was but I was
doing a lot of long thinking back then.
So that was the advantage I was getting.
But there's a third as well. I have like
a it's not an abstract artwork to do
here, but it it it's I'm doing artwork
here that's going to represent
something. All right. So, I'm drawing
for people who are listening, not
watching. I'm drawing what can only be
described as like expertly rendered
humans.
And they're each holding signs. That's
clear right Jesse?
>> Yeah. All
>> right. So, there's like a lot of people
like holding up signs and then Oh, this
is going to get profound. Jesse's going
to wipe a tear away from his face when
I'm done drawing this. There's some
someone over on the side. This is This
is not looking like a hope.
It looks kind of bad. Jesse, he's
helping up someone. You get that? That's
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
>> He's doing something to someone.
>> Yeah. So, it's like uh there's a whole
group of people like waving signs, but
someone else is off to the side actually
like literally helping someone. So, what
is that supposed to represent? uh it
helps you avoid fall into the trap of an
easy tribalism. Without the ability to
apply long thinking to important issues,
issues you care about, issues that are
important to the world, you will fall
back on a more easy tribalism where you
just choose a tribe to be yours and
you're like, "All I care about is making
sure that we keep calling all the other
tribes blackhearted and scoundrels, and
I just want to focus on hating them
instead of having original thoughts or
or extracting my own principles for
understanding the world. I will just
consume short summaries of what the
leaders of my tribe uh espouse as being
true and then I'll just like parrot
those. I I I have no real understanding
of the world. I just want my tribe to
succeed. I kind of pretend like I'm
helping the world, but really um I'm
just liking being part of a crowd. The
result of that sort of easy tribalism
is, you know, often a mixture of anger
and despair. They might help you feel
sort of alive in the moment, like it
gives you some chemicals. But long
thinkers instead find real fascination
and beauty and challenge in confronting
the issues of the day. They have clarity
that comes not just from a desire to win
over another tribe, but from putting in
the time required to grapple with
something difficult and find their way
to its roots and and really believe to
their core, this is important to me and
I'm willing to go and act on it. All of
the great prophets and activists of
history from Jeremiah through MLK all
depended on long thinking, not an easy
tribalism. So for those three reasons,
self-reflection, production of things
that really are valuable and uh the
ability to escape tribalism and like
really know what you believe in and
really try to make a difference. All of
that depends on long thinking. You take
long thinking away, you have a much more
impoverished life. And I think a lot of
people today are suffering from exactly
that type of impoverishment.
All right, brings me to the second part
of this discussion.
Why are we losing our ability to do long
thinking? Well, obviously the the
general cause, right? This is me. This
is my show. This is a show about
understanding and responding to
technology in a way that helps human
flourishing. Clearly, the problems come
back to our modern technological
environment. They almost always do in
this show. But I want to drill a little
bit deeper. I think there are two
particular reasons that come out of our
modern technological environment that
are more specifically making long
thinking something that's becoming more
and more difficult for the average
person to do. The first thing is the way
that digital distractions undermine our
comfort with sustained attention. Right?
Long thinking requires sustained
attention because you have to keep your
thoughts intentionally and persistently
on trying to work with the information
you have and try out different
structures. Your mind's eye has to be
focused and unwavering. That requires
sustained attention. The digital
distractions that are readily abundant
in the modern digital environment as we
know
makes us worse at sustaining attention.
That's because we have hyper palatable
content. So, we have algorithmically
curated content that's selected for our
own particular interest. It gives us a
pure reward signal. We've talked about
this for the last couple of months on
this show that creates a bundle of
neurons in your short-term motivation
system that are super well tuned to
giving a super clear vote for pick up
phone, pick up phone, pick up phone.
Because it's getting such a clear
consistent reward with the occasional
intermittent very big reward, that vote
is powerful. And so you're constantly
breaking up your attention and you get
less comfortable sustaining it because
you can't politically speaking in this
metaphor, you can't win the vote against
the pick up the phone neurons that long
before you get exhausted. Um, in the
professional setting then we also have
the hyperactive hive mind collaboration
scourge where too much work is happening
with back and forth unsynchronized
messaging which means you constantly
have to check email, you constantly have
to check Slack and that makes it
impossible for you to let your attention
actually do the slow focusing on a
single topic. So we got hyper palatable
content, hyperactive hive mind. You put
those two things together. We really
lose our ability to stand attention. One
of the many casualties of that common
problem that we talk about a lot is long
thinking if something is uncomfortable
because you can't keep that mind's eye
focused when it's phone, email, phone,
email. All right. The second reason the
modern technological environment is
undermining long thinking is that the
necessity for this activity, the things
that drove it drove us towards some sort
of long thinking on a regular basis have
been significantly reduced due to
technological replacements in particular
tools like Google AI and social media.
So, for example,
we used to do self-reflection style long
thinking much more often because we had
a lot of time alone with our thoughts.
And those were often the thoughts we
were having. Hey, something happened.
I'm upset about it. I'm excited about
it. I'm I'm I'm uh down on myself or
like this day went really poorly at this
like work off site. Like what's going on
in my life? What's going on
professionally? And then when we're
alone with those thoughts,
we have no uh nothing else to do but to
start moving them around and let me uh
file them away and take this out. Let me
try rec combinations of new
associations. Here's the structures I
use for myself meaning now. Maybe I need
to do some renovations over here. We got
used to that out of necessity because we
had a lot of time with our thoughts and
those were a lot of thoughts we had. I
mean, think about the like teenager
alone in their room playing the the Lisa
Lo songs, right? What are you doing up
there? you're writing your diary and
like trying to make sense of your
thoughts.
Today, when you have like smartphones
that can deliver alternative programming
that will distract you in any situation,
we're not forced to do that anymore.
We can numb away our thoughts or avoid
the thoughts. The teenager who's upset,
the business person upset after the bad
meeting, we can let father Tik Tok take
that off our hands. And so, we don't get
that experience. We don't get that
experience with uh self-reflection.
Okay. The other way, the other uh thing
that we've lost, necessity for long
thinking that we've lost has to do with
how we just understood ideas. It used to
be
if you didn't actually go pursue
information about something, you were
clearly ignorant about it. Like if if
you weren't reading the newspaper, you
didn't know how to talk about what was
happening in a political campaign. If
like the the day we're recording this is
the mayoral election in New York City.
If this was like the mayoral elections
when I was a kid, this is like the the
Giuliani Dinkens before that Dinkens
like that type of years. If you weren't
reading the newspaper, like you would
have no idea. Like I have no idea what's
going on. Today I can I can grab almost
any kid and they'll have like something
to say because like they've seen some
Mandani Tik Toks or you get these little
quick summaries of things and you can
kind of feel in the know. you can see
what your tribe feels about something
without having to like actually just
read more raw information. And so you
don't need that to today, but back then
for anything you want to know more
about, you had to kind of take in raw
information. Not raw, but like not
takes, not like here's how you should
feel how your tribe feels about it. It's
like it's a 2,000word article in like
your local paper. It's a it's a news
report with Dan Rather, right? It's you
a a special at PBS. It's a book. So you
had to like engage with a lot more
information that wasn't yet I'm not
going to say wrong and say unrefined
that you had to then refine yourself to
pull out of it some understanding and
compare it to other things you know and
like okay so how do I feel about this
not today your phone can do this for you
social media will just like okay I kind
of follow people in my tribe I get the
quick takes I like this guy I don't like
this guy this guy it's it's great it's
like young sexy mayor like no no he's
scary socialist or like you get the
answer right away but in those old days
you had to like I would have to read
about this and then on my own figure out
how I feel about that,
right? Because other you weren't getting
this information in a in a a way that
was already partisanized.
So you would read kind of boring,
unrefined information and then say, "How
do I fit this into things? Oh, I guess I
like this guy. I don't like this guy. I
have reservations. We'll see. I want to
see this or that."
And that that was uh that act of having
to integrate less refined information to
your existing understanding so you
didn't seem ignorant or dumb required
long thinking.
But again, we don't do it today because
you don't have to. We can just tell you
how you're supposed to feel. Everyone
has an opinion on everything. People
know very little about it. I know this,
Jesse, because I've been doing a lot of
AI criticism. Everyone has an opinion
about AI. Um and so so few people know
anything about it. It's It's uh It's
crazy. I think I'm gonna grow a beard
like Eleazar Udowski and then I'm gonna
seem more profound.
I'm gonna do Here's what I'm gonna do.
I'm going to wear a wizard's hat, like a
Harry Potter style wizard's hat, and I
think that'll just make it seem and I'm
going to have a long gray beard um like
Rick Rubin. And then I think people
that's it. And then I'll just whatever I
say about AI, that's probably right.
That wizard knows what he's talking
about. I'll talk real profoundly. Um so,
so that's what's going on. So that's the
second reason why technology undermined
our ability to to to do long thinking.
So okay, just to summarize, issue number
one, it fragmented sustained attention.
Now long thinking is hard. Issue number
two, technology made information that's
already refined that just to tell you
exactly what you need to think and know.
Uh gets rid of the like natural need to
have to actually process less refined
information into your own personal
understand structures. People don't have
personal understand structures anymore.
they join teams and then they get uh
quick telegraph updates of how that team
feels about things. Don't need long
thinking in that world either. All
right. So, I've made my case now that
long uh thinking is both important for a
flourishing life and due to the modern
technological environment is
diminishing. The next big question then
is how do you get the skill back if you
want it? That's what we're going to
tackle next, right after we take a quick
break to hear from the sponsors that
make this show possible.
All right, this is a true story. When I
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of the building above the door. Did you
see that coming in today, Jesse, with
the flashing lights?
>> I missed it, actually.
>> How could you miss it? It's massive.
It's flashing,
>> but I was also like flusher cuz I forgot
my keys.
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available all month long. And with
Wayfair's fast and easy shipping, you
can get what you need in time for the
holidays. Now, here's why I like
Wayfair. The price is good. Yes. Uh the
shipping is easy. Yes, that's no small
thing. Even for big things, you'll you
could they'll even assemble it for you.
But, and this is the key, they have
great styles. You can get really
interesting things from Wayfair that
you're not going to find anywhere else.
Like when we redid our back patio, we
needed something furniture out there
that was interesting and functional. We
went to one of those like outdoor stores
you can go to in like the fancy malls
where like the price for uh an outdoor
table was like roughly the price of a uh
Boeing F-16 fighter jet. It's just crazy
arbitrary prices, right? Like forget
that. Wayfair prices that made sense,
but like interesting things, things we
put out there that we actually like the
way they looked. Few clicks later, we
were done. So Wayfair should be your
go-to destination for everything home,
no matter your style or budget. And they
make spruce sprucing your uh sprucing up
your home easy and fast with free
shipping even on the big stuff. They'll
even help you set it up. So don't miss
out on early Black Friday deals. Head to
wayfair.com now to shop Wayfair's Black
Friday deals for up to 70% off. That's w
afir.com.
Sale ends December 7th. All right, let's
also talk Grammarly. In the knowledge
economy, the ability to communicate
clearly is everything. Not only does it
help you do your job, but if you uh
communicate well, it's going to help you
get promoted. So, you really should care
about your communication, but most
people struggle because writing is hard
and it's not obvious how to get better
at it. This is where Grammarly can enter
the scene. Grammarly is the essential AI
communication assistant that boosts both
the productivity and quality of your
writing. I don't think people really
realize how powerful this tool has
gotten in recent years. I want to tell
you about a particular feature that I've
been enjoying, the proofreading agent.
Right? So, here's a real example. I had
to write an email that was going out to
like a somewhat large group of people.
Uh, so I typed out a quick draft, but
before uh sending I had the proofreading
agent take a look. Of course, it found
some straightforward mistakes. You know,
Grammarly is good at that, which is
great, but it can do a lot more. There's
a whole list of functions you can apply.
Like when I clicked on sharpen opening
point, it suggested ways to be less
wishy-washy in my language in the
opening sentences, which actually made
that a better email without me having to
like sit there and pour over it like I
was writing a New Yorker piece, right?
So, that was really useful. I'm not the
only one to find Grammarly so helpful.
90% of professionals say Grammarly has
saved them time writing and editing. 93%
of professionals report that Grammarly
helps them get more work done. It even
has a new feature called AI chat that
can help you anytime whether you want to
like kick off your idea or just polish
some things. You can just type right
into it and it it will help you right
there. So, Grammarly helps you produce
better writing faster and that is
incredibly valuable. Sign up for free
and experience how Grammarly can elevate
your professional writing from start to
finish. Visit grammarly.com/mpodcast.
That's grammarly.com/mpodcast.
All right, Jesse, let's get back to our
deep dive.
All right, as promised in our final
section here, we are going to get into
the ways that you can get better at long
thinking now that you're convinced that
it's worth it and you need some
practice. So, I'm going to suggest a
concrete strategy and I'm actually going
to get this strategy from an essay I
first published all the way back in
2009. This is like the early days of my
blog when my writing was still
studentfacing.
It describes a strategy that I started
back then and I still do today and I
think it is the best training the best
single thing you can do to train your
ability to do long thinking. All right,
I'm going to load this on the screen
here for people who are watching instead
of just listening. Uh you'll see here
the name of this method is the notebook
method. Now the subtitle says how can
pen and paper transform you into a star
student? Because again I was I was
writing just for students back then but
stay with me because this advice is
relevant to anyone. That's what I
learned as I uh as I advanced in my
career and kept using it. All right. So,
I'm going to uh scroll down here a
little bit and I am going to start at
the paragraph that says the idea is
simple. There's four steps here. I'm
going to read each of them. Number one,
buy a sturdy college ruled notebook
dedicated to the relevant class. Right?
All right. So, that was for school, but
we can just generalize that to say to
the the the relevant problem that you
want to make progress on. Number two,
buy a good pin. Nothing beats a black
uniball micro.5 millimeter. I keep talk
I've been talking about those. Jesse is
literally holding one. Show us, Jesse.
>> I adopted it because I was always a fan.
>> I've been So, you This is proof. I've
been using those for a long time. Number
three, take your notebook and pen and go
to the most relaxing, meditative,
non-distracting place possible. The deep
stacks of the library is okay. Hiking 30
minutes into the woods or onto the dunes
overlooking a windswept springtime beach
is even better. Number four, spend 1 to
three hours working out of your work
working out your thinking on the task at
hand in your notebook. Spend the last 20
minutes carefully summarizing your
results on a clean page that you mark
with the date and a title. For example,
here's a snapshot from a page in my PhD
thesis notebook. There we go, Jesse.
Look at that. All right. So, I recognize
this uh this was from my doctoral
dissertation which I defended later that
year. The composition algorithm.
You're probably right now I know Jesse,
you're seeing multiple mistakes probably
is as as you're looking at this. Um but
I I actually remembered it. It was it
was taking two um two randomized
algorithms. One of which was simulating
a channel and one of which is simulating
an algorithm that uses that channel. um
treating them formally as as as formal
IO automata and then it's a it's a
systematic algorithm. So it's it's a
conceptual algorithm not something you
actually run that just shows the
existence of a combined composed
algorithm in which the channel the the
algorithm on this channel uh simulator
behaves like the algorithm on the
channel. It was a pain to work out these
details. Um but that was a big part of
this thesis. This was actually
interestingly the work I presented in
Bolognia and so there we go full circle
right this should look familiar because
that's exactly what I was talking about
in the article from the beginning of
this uh podcast from 2012 when I was at
Berkeley working on a problem as a
professor that was three years later so
clearly this notebook method of I'm
going to take a notebook I'm going to go
somewhere scenic and I'm going to sit
there and just work in this scenic
environment on this problem and then in
the last 20 minutes summarizing the best
I can with a title and date to kind of
make it all official. That's exactly in
2012 I was still doing that. I still do
it today. So, this this method has stuck
with me. Why does it work? Well, I'm
going to scroll down farther in this
article because here was my best
explanation for why the notebook method
is so uh successful. I said it's power
sources from the following truths.
Number one, writing down your thoughts
forces you to clarify what you're
thinking and confront ambiguities or
inconsistencies.
It's hard work. You'll probably feel
painful resistance the first few times
you try this method, but you must
persevere. Eventually, you gain
familiarity with a novel sensation of
deep thinking. Number two, you can't
check email using a spiralbound
notebook. You also can't update your
Facebook profile or tweet about your
YouTube channel. That's somewhat timely.
It's that's from a while ago, 15 years
ago, but those technologies still exist.
If you're high up in the library stacks,
or better yet, in the woods or at the
beach, it's just you in your notebook.
Eventually, your urge towards
distraction will give away. And three,
paper facilitates creative thinking. You
can draw arrows and circle concepts and
sketch structure. Something about a good
ballpoint scraping across a thick grain
paper stock unlocks area of your mind
that tend to hibernate when you're
slumped over your laptop in a crowded
study lounge. I think those explanations
are exactly right. Writing down your
thoughts as opposed to just keeping in
your head makes you be more organized.
That's exactly right. Your thinking is
clearer. It makes your long thinking
better. Being uh without technology in a
very scenic place reduces distracting
poles, helps you focus more. I kept
pushing for inspiring places in this
article. So yeah, library stack, sure,
beach better. So, if you're in an
inspiring place, that gives you an extra
bit of uh of energy. It's so different.
You feel chemicals, but they're not the
standard chemicals. It really unlocks
new things. And finally, you're in a
paper form. You can draw pictures and
squares and boxes and mathematical
formulas and connect things together
with arrows. And so, it unlocks as sort
of like a freer type of thinking than if
you're just trying to hold something in
your head or just typing. I think those
reasons do a very good job. Whatever I
identified back then in 2009 does a very
good job of explaining why this method
works. And so this is what I want you to
do. If you want to become a better long
thinker, implement the notebook method
at least once a week, preferably in the
most scenic places possible. It could be
a work problem. You can you could it
could be something about yourself, like
a self-reflection thing you're working
on. It could be visioning or planning
for your future, like what your deeper
life is missing missing. It could be
about making sense of something in the
world that's catching your attention. It
could be about clarifying your personal
principles, values, or beliefs. Whatever
the target, take that good notebook,
take that good pen, go somewhere scenic,
1 to three hours, last 20 minutes, write
it down. This is calisthenics for your
ability to produce thoughts. So if
reading hard things, like we talked
about a couple episodes ago, is like
calisthenics
for uh being able to understand hard
things for a mind that has new
connections and can can take in
complicated thoughts.
The notebook method is calisthenics for
then how do you produce original complex
thoughts of yourself? So it's a you read
combine that with the notebook method
and now you have a brain that's internet
proof. Now you have a brain that's
algorithm proof. There's other things
you can do to become a better long
thinker. But I'm just saying notebook
method once a week. Simple, but that
really does make a big difference. I
still do that to this day. The idea is
not new. I'm not the only one who does
this. There was a a section in my 2019
book, Digital Minimalism, that I
particularly like that I get into where
I I go and visit the the soldiers the
old soldiers retirement home now in like
Pworth in DC, but sort of in the hills
above where the White House is in DC and
Abraham Lincoln, I wrote about this how
Abraham Lincoln would go there. That was
his like his weekend retreat up into the
hills to this house they had up there
and he would go there to basically apply
the notebook method. He would wander the
grounds and think and try to make sense
of whatever the issue is of the day. And
he would write his ideas as not always
in a notebook but famously on scraps of
paper. Uh some of which he would hide in
the lining or or store in the lining of
his sort of famous stove top style hat.
It was up there wandering trying to make
sense of his thoughts that he reached
like his decisions about the
Emancipation Proclamation, some of his
biggest military decisions. So, I'm not
the first to come up with the notebook
method, but it is a great way of
extracting long thinking from your day.
All right, Jesse, let's do some
takeaways from today's discussion.
[Music]
All right, so here's the thing. We like
to imagine that our brain is a neutral
observer of an objective world that
surrounds us.
and that our daily experience is
therefore determined by whatever we
happen to encounter in the world that
day. But this model isn't right. Our
experience is determined by a
combination of what we encounter and all
of the relevant mental structures that
we have built in our minds. The
structures that help us explain
ourselves and our beliefs and our
understanding about how other people and
the world functions. If you're
comfortable with long thinking, you can
create these structures in ways that are
meaningful and important to you. This
allows you in a literal sense to help
shape the world you live in to be more
rich.
Now, if you allow instead the modern
technological environment to degrade
your long thinking ability, you'll end
up encountering the world through
impoverished mental structures that were
implanted half-hazardly in your mind
through distracting content and random
things you happen to come across. You
are in that case letting a bunch of
random algorithms essentially shape your
world into something that's most likely
to be nihilistic, angry, random, or
boring. So, if you don't want your phone
to determine your world, then you need
to rembrace the joys and power of long
thinking. It's not that hard to do. You
buy a notebook, you hike somewhere
scenic, you work out a complicated
thought on paper, you end with a clear
summary, and you repeat. It's a simple
habit, but over time, it will re it will
help you re-engage with long thinking.
And as long thinking becomes more common
and comfortable for you, you will be
able to transform your world into
something that is much more meaningful
and satisfying. So give long thinking a
try.
All right, there you go. Uh we still
have a lot of great show ahead. Jesse
pulled a collection of questions here
that that a lot of them are about like
notebooks and trying to take notes and
and organizing your thoughts and so like
we're going to get into the nitty-gritty
of of sort of how you have notebook
assisted long thinking. We have a case
study. We've got a call and because this
is the first episode we're recording in
November. At the end, I'm going to tell
you I'll review briefly the five books I
read during the last month. Uh before we
do that though, let's see. Let's do some
uh housekeeping. All right, Jesse. So,
they can find these episodes if you're
listening on YouTube.
>> Yep.
>> Just search for uh what's it? Cal
Newport Media. You'll see the latest
episode. Uh subscribe to the newsletter
if you haven't already at calport.com.
So the the newsletter discussion, it
often complements the podcast. It'll
take it in a different direction or add
something that wasn't in the episode or
vice versa. So if you like the podcast,
you really got to have that newsletter.
It's also where I announce things and
talk about things and hey, here's a book
I recommend or, you know, I'm going to
be showing up in your town to talk. So
>> it comes out the same time every week.
>> Yeah, it's the same time. It's it's they
come out together. You'll get it in your
inbox. Um and the newsletter will tell
you what's in the podcast. And so you
got to subscribe to that. I bet that's
been around for a long time. 2007.
>> Yeah,
>> you could subscribe. caliper.com has
been around for a while. Um, and we love
your questions, Jesse. Tell us about uh
how to submit questions, what type of
questions you're looking for.
>> You can go to deeplife.com/listen.
There's two links there where you can
submit audio questions or written
questions. So, just go there and check
it out.
>> Make them short and sweet. Um,
preferably questions about different
ways of either understanding technology
or responding to different technologies,
whether in your work or your personal
life.
um are preferred. All right, so speaking
of questions, I think Jesse, it's time
for us now to hear some questions from
our listeners.
>> All right, first question is from Tara.
How do you organize your notebooks,
physical or remarkable, for your books
and New Yorker articles?
>> Um, well, I'll still say I'm still
using, by the way, people have asked me
about this. I'm still using my
Remarkable. I'm now upgraded to a
Remarkable Paper Pro. Um, and I still
really like that product. Usually I kind
of fall out of favor of products that
aren't just like notebooks and.5
millimeter ballpoint pens, but I've
stuck with it. All right, so here's how
I uh use my different technologies. I
still have physical single-purpose
notebooks. I use field note notebooks
for uh particular issues that I want to
come back to again and again. So if I'm
like working out a book or I'm going
through like an important uh life
decision or I'm trying to do like an
overhaul or I I want to like do
something like specific I want to come
back to again and again. And I like to
have a singlepurpose practical notebook
that I can bring with me and just let
those thoughts begin to collect. I use
notebooks on my remarkable, so virtual
notebooks on my remarkable e- in
notebook for a lot of ongoing projects
where I need to like organize especially
notes that are taken over time. So like
if I'm having a series of meetings like
uh I'm on the board of trustees for my
kids schools. So, I want to like have a
a notebook to keep track of those notes
from like the different meetings and
they're dated. Like that type of
notebook I just keep as a virtual
notebook within my remarkable my like
Halloween design planning uh I do in the
remarkable. I actually got a lot of I
was happy Jesse like on Halloween I
didn't know if people would appreciate
what went into my my uh customuilt light
sound controller.
>> I was going to ask you about that.
>> I was like people are just going to be
like oh because it's not like it's a
super impress it's not a super
impressive big thing to see. It was just
like a synchronized laser battle. A lot
of people came up and appreciated the
techn like the complexity of actually
the circuits for that. So, I really
appreciated that. I didn't know if
people would get it, but they did. I
have ideas for next year, by the way.
There's going to be movement,
>> which you put in your remarkable
notebook.
>> I you I do use my remark I have a
Halloween notebook in there.
>> It goes so that goes in there as well.
Um, okay. Then for for my like the
specific things I do again and again for
my professional career, the things that
are at the core of what I do for my job,
I have more customized tools. I've
talked about this before, but books and
um non-mathematical articles. I use
Scriber and it's in the Scriber project
for each of those that I collect. All
the notes and clippings and thoughts and
articles and links, they're all in the
various research folders I keep within
the Scriber project. more mathematical
articles of the type like I've been
talking about in this episode that I
don't write as many of those right now
anymore. But my old theory articles I
would use um Overleaf which is like a a
web-based collaborative editor for the
markup language you use for mathematical
articles and I would just start putting
ideas in the actual tool I'm using to do
the writing. So I've got a lot of tools
still um those are the ones I mainly
use.
>> So you use your remarkable pretty much
every day.
>> Yeah, I use it a lot. Yeah. Yeah, I use
it a lot. I like it. I think it's a
really good product. They're not even a
sponsor. I just, you know, they sent me
one, but I appreciate that they did. Um,
all right. Who do we got next?
>> Next up is Megan. How do I get better at
reading? I'm an 18-year-old student and
my reading has dropped in recent years.
How do I reverse this? Should I just
read more? Are all books or articles
fair game?
>> Uh, yes. And, right. Yes, you need to
read more. Uh, for now, just whatever
you're most excited to read, great. The
key is actually uh minutes of eyes on
page because you're reactivating those
reading circuits. You're re sort of
mileelinating them. You're trying to get
uh you're trying to get that the
friction reduced for the active reading.
So, if you can get involved in like a
reading fandom, I'm going to read uh
whatever like dark academia books, which
as far as I can tell are tend to be it's
always like young women and these like
always like some sort of weird secret
society cult and then at some point like
a ghost is beating them up like so
whatever if that's your thing or fairy
romance or whatever it is um whatever I
don't care what it is minutes and
minutes on page but I said yes and
because the other thing you need to do
is make attention
sustained attention be less foreign and
scary. You're an 18-year-old student, so
I'm going to assume that the very best
way to do that is you have to stop using
your phone so much. You got to stop.
Having your phone as a constant
companion is not normal or healthy. And
I don't care if everyone does it. You're
noticing the beginning of those side
effects. Now, reading is like the basic
activation of
advanced symbolic thinking. If you're
struggling reading, your whole brain is
struggling because of that stupid piece
of glass.
So, I take social media off of it.
They're not going to miss you. Take
social media off of it. Keep it in one
room when you're at home, not with you.
Just be used to having long periods of
your day where the phone is not there.
You cannot be interrupted. Your mind has
nothing to check. You have to
drastically reduce the footprint of your
phone in your life. I don't know how
else to tell you this. If you want your
brain to get recomfortable again with
sustained uh attention, which you'll
need to do reading, the reading will
build the circuits. That sustained
attention will then help you do long
thinking. and all this is going to make
your life better. The phone wants to
make it worse. So, you got to
renegotiate now that you're an adult.
Renegotiate your relationship with your
phone so that you can build a life on
your own terms. All right, who do we got
next? Next up is Francis. My father was
an English teacher who passed away a
couple years ago. While clearing out his
house, I was reminded how I used to
enjoy creative writing. I'm currently a
university profess professor that writes
for my work, but not creatively. I don't
want to write on computer. So I was
wondering if you had any suggestions. I
own and use a remarkable.
>> Yeah, it's interesting. I mean speaking
of uh professors like I always thought
this was an interesting
observation.
So my my dad was a professor for a
while. My grandfather was a a professor
and my grandfather was a very prolific
professor. So I'm from a line of you
know scholars. My grandfather wrote a
lot of books. I don't remember how many
but like at least a dozen. um you know
academic ebooks. He was a a Baptist
Christian apologist was at Rice for a
long time as an endowed chair and then
the provost of the Southwestern Baptist
Theological Seminary right before the
fundamentalist takeover. So he was like
in that world of religious scholarship.
Wrote a ton of books. Never had a
computer. Bought his first computer
after he retired. He would handw write
those books on yellow legal pads and
then a a typist would type it up and he
would look at the type drafts and he
would mark up those type drafts and then
someone would type it up again and he
would look at those. To modernize we
have this this efficiency thinking we've
taken the idea that comes out of like
industrial manufacturing in which like
all that matters right because it's a
set process so all that matters is the
speed at which things happen. We look at
that and we say, "Oh, that's so slow.
Writing on a tablet is slow. Having it
typed, you have to hand mark it and hand
it back. That's slow." But he wrote way
more books than most professors. He
wrote more books than I've written
because with cognitive activities, it's
interesting. Efficiency and slowness
isn't the same thing as an industrial
manufacturing. In fact, going slower
probably made the books better. And also
like the raw hours that you're actually
writing when you write a book is like a
fraction of the time involved in like
creating that book. So anyway, I always
thought that was interesting. So you
have a lot more flexibility than you
think when it comes to writing. I have a
friend who does a short story writing on
typewriters. He really likes it. So if
you're looking for an alternative um
there's several things you can do.
There's a product I'm interested in
called the Freewrite
Writ.
It's an e- in product. So it's like the
same type of screen as a Kindle. It's a
keyboard with like an e- in screen. They
have a couple different models.
And basically it's a drafting tool. So
you can see what you're typing in the
little screen as you're writing. All you
can do is like write and you can have
different folders with different files
in it. You can select one through a a
pretty slow interface and then just
start writing. You do basic editing.
There's like a backspace key or you can
move to your recent text and but you
can't do you don't have a mouse. You're
not cutting and pasting and
spellchecking and doing this. The whole
idea is you're supposed to is for
creative writers like I just want to get
a draft of this done and I have a really
good mechanical keyboard and I see the
words there and I can fix my typos in
the moment but I'm just writing till I'm
done. Then you can export them off of
the freewrite into like Google Docs or
Word or something and and uh do like a
better editing pass and work from there.
But it's like meant as a drafting tool
that you can just carry and it's
portable. I think that's really
interesting. Another thing that some
people do, I believe I first heard about
this from I think it was I think it was
Dave Edgars.
It might have been Michael Sha I don't
think it's Michael Shabban. I think this
was Dave Edgars. Um he had an old laptop
where it had no he had disabled the
internet. So it had it had no workable
Wi-Fi and it's old. There's nothing else
on it but like Word and he would use
that laptop to write. So now like you
can edit like a little bit, right? You
can do all your editing on there. You
copy and paste and move things around
and like it's not just like I'm writing
a draft, but you can't do anything else
on this computer. There's no there's no
internet. And then when he's done, you
uh USB key. All right, I'll move the
file over there and I can move it to
like my other computer and then I can if
I want to email it to someone or do
something like that. That to me is a
cool idea. So, you just get like a
simple computer and just never activate
um never activate the internet. I would
go so far as like break that wireless
chip and have someone do that for you.
Like I really can't use this on the
internet. So, this is just like a nice
writing machine. I spent $300 on it. So,
you have options from paper to something
like freewrite. The remarkable has a
keyboard. I bought a remarkable with a
keyboard. I don't I'm not going to
recommend that. Um it's too clunky. When
you're trying to type with the keyboard,
the keyboard's fine, but it's um you
have no control. I I feel like I don't
have enough control of where that text
goes. It's too hard to edit. It's not
really It's meant for like adding some
annotations to notes. So, I I wouldn't
use a remarkable for it. But I think the
free write might be an interesting tool.
Uh and then really the best solution is
cheap laptop, no Wi-Fi, nothing else on
it. All right. Uh let's see here. All
right. So, we have some more questions
coming up, including a a call that's on
these topics, and we'll review the books
I read last month. So, you're going to
want to keep sticking around for the
show. We're going to take just a brief
break to hear from uh a couple other
sponsors, then we're going to get right
back in it.
All right. So, as I mentioned, the
holiday season is here. We know it
because the wreath is up at the Deepwork
HQ and this brings with it a lot of
excitement and joy, but also a lot of
chaos and busyiness. So, I want to make
a suggestion. Give yourself the gift of
turning your home into a sanctuary. A
place where you can slow down with your
family, get comfortable, read a book by
the fire, hopefully with some snow
falling outside, and just enjoy the
quiet. You want to fully realize that
vision, you need Cozy Earth. Let me tell
you about the Cozy Earth products that I
use regularly and really do feel like
help me create a sanctuary in my home. I
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Cozy Earth. Jesse, I want to tell you
something that I'm not very good at.
That's hiring. As I've mentioned on the
show before, we recently hired a uh
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newsletter and you know, it made a big
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That makes all the difference in your
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Indeed is all you need. All right,
Jesse, let's get back to those
questions. Who we got? Next question is
from Cidi. You have discussed Teddy
Roosevelt's astounding productivity and
his ability to read at least one book
per day. When I read, I don't get the
most out of the book unless I write
reflections or spend time thinking about
the concepts presented. And reading one
book per day would not allow me to
maximize benefit from each book. I'm
still not completely sure how Roosevelt
did that while in the White House. Mind
you, while in the White House, he
supposedly read a book a day. I think he
was a very good skimmer. I think he was
very good at getting to exactly the
points that were because he had read so
many books. You could be like
interesting interesting skip skip
skip interesting skip interesting
got it. Like, I think that's what was
happening. When it comes to your own
reading practice,
read at the pace that allows you to get
the most value. And for a book where
you're really trying to extract new
ideas, like so a book that's going to
trigger a lot of long thinking could
take a long time to read, and that's
fine. Annotate it. I often do that with
those books with my uh pencil marking
method. Do summary notes. So for big
idea books I really want to understand,
I'll I'll start a document where I write
summaries of each chapter. That really
helps me like long think through like
what the ideas are. Go for long walks to
try to integrate ideas in your life.
That's all great. The only thing I would
add to that is having some diversity of
books. You don't want every book that
you're reading to be such a heavy lift.
You're going to burn out. So mix those
in with other types of books that you
could read fast, maybe even in a day.
And go back and forth between these. But
let each book get the time that it needs
for you to get the most out of it. It's
not a race. Um, and so you don't have to
do the Teddy's pace on everything.
>> I was recently listening to Tim Ferrris
interview with uh David Senra who runs
the Founders podcast,
>> right?
>> And he reads a ton of books, but he was
saying he reads really slow. He only
reads like 25 pages an hour.
>> Yeah. So, it's like it I like this idea
of like minutes of eyes on page is
important
>> because it's all a stage where your
brain is making connections and you're
building up your knowledge and speed
depends on like the book and the person.
I'm not a particularly fast reader. It
It takes me the full month to do my five
books for sure.
All right, who we got next?
>> Next up is Bridget. Can you revisit your
explanation of singlepurpose notebooks
and reflection walks? Is this something
that you do every day or just
sporadically? So now we have terminology
for this. That's basically the notebook
method, what we just talked about in our
deep dive. So going for a walk somewhere
scenic with a single-purpose notebook
that can do nothing but hold notes on
this one topic,
it forces you to do exactly long
thinking, persistent thought towards one
problem that you're trying to make
useful progress on. You have to
reorganize, build new assoc association,
extract principles, write it down, think
about that's not quite right. So the the
single purpose notebook in the short
term acts as like an extension of your
working memory. It's a way okay, let me
write this down, let me think about
that, let me reorder it. Okay, now this
is what I really mean. So it allows you
to hold more pieces together and
rearrange them over time. It also
becomes a repository
for how your thinking has evolved. So
you might have like a few pages of kind
of scratch pages as you're working
through thoughts on your walk. And then
the final page you maybe have like a
star or a box around like okay that's
kind of the the work product of this
walk. That's the key observation. And
then the next time you do a walk or go
somewhere scenic whatever you start from
that like okay I can get up to speed on
where I was. Now you're doing more. So
in the short term it's like a working
memory. long term is like a record of
your thoughts and is that notebook fills
you're capturing an artifact of the
human brains doing what only human
brains can do. So, I love the practice
of single purpose notebooks on on
thinking walks aimed at a given problem.
That is purified long thinking. And once
you've started doing it, it really can
be addicting. Like I really always look
forward to my my long thinking. I have a
stack I have a like 50 single purpose
notebooks just waiting for me and uh a
hundred of my pens. So, I I love the
idea that I no matter what comes up, I
can grab a clean notebook and a fresh
pen and head out the door. I keep like a
big stock of those in my library at
home. All right, we got a case study
this week where people uh they send in
their examples of their stories of using
the type of advice we talked about on
the show in their own life.
>> We have case cutting. Yeah, we have
music.
>> We have music. Let's hear some music.
[Music]
Now, we're in the mood for a case study.
All right, today's case study comes from
Mason.
Mason says, "I struggled for a long
period after college. Then I discovered
your concept of deep work and was
immediately a convert. I consumed your
content. I made my phone as dumb as
possible and have long been off social
media. I wrote out my key documents,
drafted a quarterly plan. I set up a
working memory.txt file. I ordered the
time block planner. I made a Trello
board and uh assessed what kind of deep
to shallow ratio was possible given my
weekly responsibilities. I put my phone
in the kitchen and tried, though often
failed, to meditate productively. I
embraced boredom. I enrolled in you and
Scott Young's course on the focus life.
And then I started evangelizing. Through
all of this, I got promoted. I got
married. I started visiting immigration
detention centers. I'm working through
be funny like you think that's like for
a positive thing like to help the uh
people who are detained. It' be funny if
he's like to rob them.
Turns out he could steal the wallets of
people in detention centers. If you
think deeply enough about the security
lapses. No, you're doing something very
noble, Mason. I'm sorry to joke about
it. I'm working through Toltoy and spent
a lot of time practicing photography. I
go to therapy and I coach at a local
CrossFit gym. I massively reduce my
anxiety and I've created systems that
are a ballast when things feel out of
control. But these systems aren't
perfect, and I'm still vulnerable to
slipping back into the old ways, which
include you YouTube rabbit holes and
hours on my phone. I'm not expecting
this to be easy, and maybe I just need
to keep practicing. But when it comes to
cultivating the deep life, I feel like
something is missing. Maybe your new
books get into whatever that something
is. Do you ever get tired? All right.
It's a great case study followed by a
great question. So, what I like about
the case study is it indicates like a
lot of the things I talk about, I talk
about a lot of things. They're all like
loosely responding to either
understanding technology or responding
to the culture or problems that
technology creates. One of the
categories of these things I talk about
is like about the type of things he
talks about there. They try to like
organize your life. be less distracted,
but also be more intentional and have
plans at different levels and deep to
shallow work ratios and like be super
intentional. Because a lot of what makes
life today seem like busy or boring or
nihilistic or or exhausting is that
these different forces, a lot of them
technological, can like push you into
this sort of unintentional, artificial,
like frenetic state where you're
bouncing off the walls. You're like,
what's even going on? When you get
intentional about all this stuff, look
at look what all this the good stuff
that happens. promotion, marriage,
helping people, reading hard things, in
good shape, anxiety lower, talking to a
therapy therapist, like his life is
under control.
And that's why, by the way, I would
always get frustrated. Well, first of
all, I don't like being described as a
productivity guru because like these are
one column of like a massive structure
of things that all come back to
technology, right? But I get even more
frustrated when people who don't know my
work assume you they they they think
they they're the first person to
discover Frederick Winslow Taylor who
they completely misite and completely
inflate his importance which really
wasn't that much. His main importance
was for later writers to look back and
try to feel like they're smart and like
you you're just trying to you're just
trying to squeeze more work. Basically,
this is like warmed over Marxist
critical theory. It's just you're
creating this sort of false
consciousness so that you can squeeze
more labor out of the out of the sort of
brainwashed bgeoisi. It's it's work for
work's sake and hustle culture and all
this type of thing. No, it's about
gaining control of your life from the
technological forces that want to make
it chaotic, frenetic, and seemingly
meaningless. So, these things work.
Think about time smartly. You think
about attention smartly. Think about
workload smartly.
It matters. you can get your arms around
this current world that has so much
that's being thrown at you with so
little controls.
So, it's for making your life better,
not making you faster and more efficient
or more hustly. But Mason brings up a
good point here. Is that enough? And
there the answer is no as well. This is
so you can get control over stuff, but
you still it's up to you to cultivate a
deep life. This is the major turn that
my thinking and writing made around the
beginning of the pandemic, especially
the first months of the pandemic when I
coined the term the deep life because I
was at peak form then of I uh you know I
was worried about technology and
distraction and email and I was working
on my email book but I was in peak form
of like I understand information flows.
I understand human psychology. I
understand neuroscience. I understand
modern work culture and technology
culture and like how to the problems all
these things are creating. how to be
intentional and push these problems
back. But the pandemic began, I said,
"Yeah, but then what? Push them back to
do what?" And that's when I began to
talk about the deep life, which was
about being systematic about what your
life is about, reducing the stuff you
don't you don't like, amplify the stuff
you do, make a life immediate
satisfaction on your own terms. And I've
I've become, you know, increasingly
convinced the deep life is really really
important, especially if you're trying
to deal with technology.
It's the bigger better offer you make so
that Tik Tok and Sora and you know
Reddit wars with your tribal compatriots
is not so interesting anymore. You have
nothing else going on in your life. Your
life is super stressful. You're like
well that's better. But if your life is
built on your own terms
like I don't want to watch Bob Ross
break dancing on a piece of glass. I'm
living life here. This is like more
important. So like the deep life
ultimately is the the anecdote the
antidote rather the antidote to like a
lot of the poisons of the modern
technological world. So how do you do
that? Well that's the new book I'm
writing now and I you know I'm in the
middle of it. It's still we're more than
a year out from this book coming out. So
you know there's a lot more to go but
the approach I'm taking on this book is
Mason you will like this. The whole
point of this book is I don't want to
tell you what you need in a deep life.
This is not like Oprah and um Arthur
Brooks book where it's like let me tell
you the five things you need to care
about in your life uh for your life to
be better, right? It is a book that on
the topic that not enough people talk
about which is just the straight up
pragmatic
technical processes that'll let you
succeed in directing your life to
something more meaningful,
whatever that is. And in fact,
I've given you the technical processes
for how do you figure out what meaning
even means for you? And then once you
know that, how do you actually make
progress towards that? How do you avoid
just like having these sort of sporadic
burst of inspiration where you're like,
uh, we're going to move. I'm going to
like buy a dumbbell or whatever. Like,
how do you actually like systematically
um and more consistently succeed in, you
know, making your life more meaningful?
So, it's it's all about just the
practical details. The chapters, the
sections are all numbered in it. there's
a huge amount of like diagrams and all
right then you might format it this way.
I'm being like purposefully technical in
it. But to answer that final question,
but here's the thing. All that stuff you
did, Mason, you kind of have to be able
to do that before this deep life sort of
instructions, you're going to be able to
follow through with them anyways. Like
what you did, I now think about as like
the preparation for cultivating a deep
life. I call it becoming a more capable
human. You became a more capable human
who's in charge of like your time and
your your workload and your life around
you. then you need to know what to do
with that and that's where like deep
life cultivation methods come in and
you're like okay now I'm going to start
figuring out what really matters I'm
going to start making my life really
cool and radical and remarkable so
that's the book I'm working on but
you're pointing out a good thing a lot
of this stuff that people call my
productivity advice is like how to
become more capable human what you do
with it is also where the really cool
stuff happens and that's its own type of
topic so stay tuned on that Mason I'm
thinking about this stuff all day
there'll be a lot more of this to come
as I get closer to finishing that book
all right do we have a call this week
Jesse
>> yes we All right, let's hear this.
>> Hi, Cal. My name's Juan and I wanted to
ask you some advice on some extended
adventure working. I'm currently hiking
the Continental Divide Trail. I'm taking
a pit stop in Santa Fe, New Mexico
before continuing on through the snowy
mountains of southern Colorado. And
yeah, for the next 5 months, uh my only
real priority is to make it through this
next adventure. However, I don't
completely want to pause my creative
life. I draw graphic novels for fun, and
I'd love for my next project to be about
this hike I'm doing right now. So, this
brought to mind your idea of adventure
work, where you make progress on work by
engaging with ideas while immersed in a
totally unrelated environment.
How would you recommend that I use my
time on this hike towards that goal? I
have some pocket notebooks that I could
use as sketchbooks or single-purpose
notebooks and I also have a journal.
However, the vast majority of my time uh
needs to be spent on the trail so that I
can cover the 20 or 25 miles that I need
to do each day.
Um okay, so this is a long thinking push
to the extreme type of case study. You
have all day long you're just in scenic
environments alone with your own
thoughts. It's a perfect environment for
long thinking. The real issue is you're
doing too much. You're going to burn out
your brain. I would choose sessions
throughout the day where like for the
next hour, I'll be working on the
following thing in my brain. Long
thinking target, making sense of a new
creative idea, making sense of yourself,
trying to make sense of the the insights
that you're gaining on the trail. Now, I
know you can't stop that often. So,
you're going to get really good at
working with these things in your head
and then during like a brief water
break, adding those notes pretty refined
to your page or if it's a graphic novel
thing you're working on, maybe you have
a sketch. So, really, you're probably
working more on
ideas and styles and plots and
innovations like in your mind because
you don't have much time to draw and
then maybe at night you can do a little
bit of drawing. But yeah, have long if
you do long thinking sessions, multiple
long thinking sessions every day, you
can figure out a lot of stuff. be more
ambitious than just I want to think
about my novel. Think about like your
whole creative career, the future of
graphic novels. Build a whole intricate
universe Brandon Sanderson level of
complexity type of uh uh you know
creative universe of ideas that all hook
together in which you're going to build
20 graphic novels that all intricately
inconnect. You kind of have all these
notes in your notebooks that is you have
the the raw number of brain cycles you
can now deploy towards whatever you want
on this continental divide trip is
massive and you can come out of it with
some like really fun creative output.
So, uh, fill those notebooks. Do most of
your thinking while you're walking. It's
the best way to think anyways. And raise
your ambitions about the type of things
that you think about.
All right, that brings us to our final
part of the show. Uh, because this is
the first uh first podcast we're
recording November. Not the first one to
come out in November, the first one
we're recording in November. I want to
talk about the books I read in the
preceding month. As you know, my goal is
to to read five books every month. helps
keep my mind connected and sharp so that
when I produce ideas, I have a better
tool to work with. All right, so here's
the five books. I've I wrote down some
notes for each. Interesting. October was
an interesting collection. All right, so
here we go. Book number one, The Gift of
the Jews by Thomas Cahill.
So, Thomas K. Hill, this is book two of
a series called Hinges of History, where
every book in this series is about like
a small group of people in a historical
moment that ended up having an outsized
impact of history. So, I know K Hill
because I read his first book years back
from the series, which was called How
the Irish Saved Civilization. I read
this right before my first trip, the
Ireland, you know, a long time ago. And
the the small group of people here were
the Irish monks.
And it was about how during like the
dark ages, these monks were keeping
alive all these manuscripts and
recopying them over and maintaining them
off on like kind of the corner of the
world. And then those were the
manuscripts that like helped spur the
Renaissance because they kept them alive
even as like the rest of Europe was sort
of uh burning up in the fall of the
Roman Empire and the dark ages that
follow. So like that was like a really
cool history because it was a history
but it was about a small group had this
outsized impact. So the gift of the Jews
is his second book. The premise is
interesting, right? It's about how this
like this small small group of uh you
know herdsmen in Canaan um ended up
coming up with these ideas that shaped
like all of the modern world stuff that
we just think now are like self-evident
or came out of philosophy but they
didn't. things like the worth of the
individual or progressive notions of
justice. Um, even the idea of
non-yclical his just history as a thing.
Cahil does a really good job of talking
about like the the context of like at
the time of when like Aram left Harin
like in the the Sumerian culture and the
Egyptian culture of that period there
was no history. time was cyclical like
they're they're all of the people of
these first the first great
civilizations as well as like all uh not
like indigenous peoples all around the
world. They kind of looked like to the
stars and said they're repeating and
everything's a cycle and the same things
happen again and again and no individual
is that important and everything's just
going to repeat and what's going to
happen is going to happen. The Greeks
thought the same thing and and the Jews
like no there's an actual history. Look,
this person was this person's son and
this person this person and history as a
linear thing matters. Like these were
like big ideas. So I I came to this book
like oh this is great. Uh he's setting
the context which I love of like this
the ancient world roughly like second
third millennium BC and like how this
small group of people had a completely
different way of thinking about things
that was going to explode and change the
world. But then I think the book fell
off a little bit in my opinion. I don't
know if this was filler, but like long
parts of the book is just sort of
retelling the stories from the Hebrew
Bible, like we're just going to and then
this is what happened in like the book
of Joshua. And it felt filler like,
well, wait, you had these like great
there's these these ideas about their
impact are great with a small group
having a big impact, but I don't need
like the entire Hebrew Bible just
summarized. So probably the Irish Saved
America was a stronger book, but like
the I the first this is like 50 pages of
this book were really like a tour to
force of popular history making in a way
my favorite type of popular history
making like oh I didn't know this like
this is a really smart explanation of
what the world was like and you're
making it very accessible but it's
actually pretty complicated what you're
pulling from. So great beginning but
then I think it was too much of like and
then David did this and I was like okay
I've I've heard those stories before.
So, but interesting read nonetheless.
All right. The next book I read was uh
this was actually from a listener
recommended this the the new Lin Manuel
Miranda biography by Daniel Pollock
Pelzner who's a New Yorker writer. So,
this is I think the first like biography
actual biography of him written with
cooperation um with Linam Well. Um, so
it's interesting like you know first
biographies of contemporary figures it's
really like a big part of the goal is
just getting the timelines right because
you're working with the person and
various resources and people there's
been profiles and stuff and I wrote
about them in my my most recent book and
there's all these like pieces out there
that are kind of right and stuff that's
not right and like it's just a tick tock
of like I want to get this happened then
he went here then he went here and so
like you know it's it's it establishes
that. So, it's really interesting to if
you want to just get what is the beat
bybeat actual story of Lin Manuel up to
this point. I mean, it's it's a it's a
bit heographic, but you kind of expect
first biographies to be especially
because you have the participation of
the person for first biography. So,
you're not going to be like this guy
sucked, you know, because he's
that was the first sentence of the
biography actually was kind of
interesting like Hamilton can blow me.
He's
Miranda sucked. There's one very No,
that's not how it started. It was a
biography. Couple things I noticed
that I learned that were interesting.
The thing that uh first sort of vaulted
Linmo Miranda like uh got the attention
of producers coming out of college and
got him on the route the his first
Broadway musical. It was the hip-hop
freestyle narration. So he had put that
into In the Heights, the version that he
produced and wrote as a college student.
had a lot of issues, but it had that
hip-hop narration that like you're
probably more familiar with from
Hamilton, but he was a really good
freestyle hip-hop freestyle artist
because he was in a freestyle improv
group that would it was like an improv
group, but they would do it was like,
you know, you do rap battles, but it
would be they would rap about like
things the audience would talk about and
they got really really good. So, he's a
super fluent and he was really inspired
by 90s era, you know, he's roughly our
age, like 90s era hip hop where they
where you had these like super talented
uh wordsmiths and rhymers and you know,
you you had the notorious B.I., you
know, you had um whatever, right? Okay.
That's what they the the producers that
were like, we're going to bankroll you
like working on your first play for
eight years. That's what they saw. Like
that is what's new. It then turned out
later that he was like a melody prodigy
as well that like he could just make he
could just play with melody and make
really catchy or interesting or like
melodic songs. So like he had these
other skills as well, but that was the
thing that caught him out. He was not a
great musician. Um so he had to hire,
you know, it's when he started working
with great musicians that it really made
a difference um in his career. Um he
wasn't a great storyteller. In the
Heights they had to hire, they brought
on a a storyteller to write the book. um
that's not his his skill, but he was an
unmatched songwriter and Hamilton you
when he got to Hamilton, he could really
just between his melodies and his
hip-hop skills, it was just no one was
in his same league. The other thing I
learned was uh Hamilton is like a
significantly more important piece of
artistic work than In the Heights. It's
just a much much better play. Even
though In the Heights won the Tony, it
like barely won the Tony for best show.
Whereas Hamilton was like the other
Broadway other shows like I guess we
should just shut down. like this is just
like significantly
it's just significantly better than
anything we're doing. So I thought that
was interesting as well. Um and
everything I did took forever. I tell
this story in my book Slow Productivity
in the Heights is like years and years
and years of work to get it there. And
Hamilton took years and years and years
of work before that came out um as well.
So it's a it's a good slow productivity
case study. So if you like Lyn Miranda,
this biography will just gift you right
down the middle. Here's what happened.
Here's what happened next. Um here's a
weird one. And so someone gave this to
me as a gift. Uh inspired by Rachel Held
Evans, who I who I think died. Um she's
not one that old. I don't know maybe I
don't know what the circumstances were.
She's a Christian writer. Um so she
wrote she's like a progressive Christian
who writes about the Bible. And I think
your most famous book was about the
women in the Bible. There was a a more
catchier name for it. Um, but actually
someone I know who's Jewish said, "Oh,
you would like this book. It's a So,
she's Christian, but it's really mainly
about the Hebrew Bible, the Old
Testament stories, right?" Um, I got
started in the buzz, okay, I'll read
this, right? Someone gives it as a gift.
I get I get started going and I'm like,
"Oh, is this going to be like a cheesy
Christian book, you know, like these
like very very accessible books where
it's like, h my emotions and this and
it's bubbly." And I was like, "Uhoh."
But then I was actually like really
impressed. Evans just takes like a lot
of like really complicated biblical
scholarship and then um makes it
incredibly accessible and it like really
getting in the weeds about how people
understand like how the Bible was
written and what it means and how
different people thought about it over
time and how not to think about or think
about it. So both theological and
historical critiques of the Bible and uh
Apologia and makes it like super
accessible. I'm like wait a second I've
read some of these sources. This is like
really deep stuff and she's making it
like seem really interesting and
accessible. So, I was actually very
impressed by that book. So, if you're
interested in like biblical stuff like I
am, um, it was much better than I
thought it would be. Uh, so I was I
guess that person knew me well. Next
book I wrote I read was actually written
by a friend of mine. The book is called
The Future of Tutoring. It was written
by Liz Cohen. Uh, this is it's an
academic press book. This is Harvard
Education Press. So, it's a book about
high impact tutoring, which is this idea
that got a huge amount of resources
during COVID. this idea that if like a
school is struggling and students are
struggling, actually the thing that
works best is high impact tutoring
one-on-one, a tutor is going to sit with
you and work with you. It seems like an
obvious idea, but there's this movement
now that's like, yeah, obvious, but why
don't we do more of this? Like, let's
not try to be fancy with complicated
educational philosophies. How do we just
get more of someone's going to work with
you three days a week for 90 minutes
until your math gets better? Like, just
go directly to the problem. So, this is
a book that it's it's exhaustively
researched and it just goes in. There
was so much money that got thrown into
this. Liz makes sense of all of these
different types of programs, how they
were structured, what happened, what
they learned, what worked, what didn't
work. So, really, it's a book that if
you're like an organization or a school
or a researcher who's interested in this
approach, this is like the definitive
book on what we learned in the co years,
what happened, what tried different
models, what's working and what's not
working. Um, but very well researched.
So, I appreciated that. Final book I
read was Society of the Spectacle by Guy
Dbor, a 1967 book. Uh it's a collection
of 221 short essays. Dbor is a Marxist
critical theorist and this was kind of
back in the heyday like kind of the the
very end of that like Marxist critical
period uh that that period you get the
like early 20th century of or Dorno and
others who are beginning to do critical
theory. This is like right before the
postmoderns came in and were like, "You
guys are all nerds, right?" So, this is
kind of like the end of it. I'm not a
Marxist expert, but like roughly the way
I think about Marxist critical theory is
it's when Marxists begin saying uh we
want to study not just like the economic
stuff that Markx wrote about, but the
ways of these subtle things in society
that are uh constructed implicitly to
help reinforce or support or protect the
economic stuff that Marx originally
wrote about. So this is where it's it's
just like hey the these cultural
artifact these the culture around us is
actually like a tool that helps keep you
know the proletariat press and the
owners of capital you know rich and
whatever right so critical theory was
like we're going to go beyond economic
analysis to like cultural analysis right
and then the postmodernists came along
and they were French and they were cool
and um and Fuko had a shaved head and
they smoked and they were like you all
are nerds meaning is for wimps, you
know, you're stu, you know, whatever.
And they made the whole thing seem like
you're all so self-s serious and ups
have these little details and you guys
wear berets, you're all nerds. And that
was kind of like the end. And that and
you know, we got reports from the Soviet
Union that like, oh, actually socialism
is not that great necessarily like
they're sitting on the goolags. Those
two things, the postmoderns and social
basically came together and that was
kind of like the end of um the heyday of
Marxism. So this is kind of at the
heyday. Uh so there's a lot of stuff in
this book. the part so the person who
recommended to me I think this was the
part they had in mind um there's a part
of this that I think is relevant to some
of our technological analysis today so I
I like getting these type of smart
analysis um it says the boore's idea of
the spectacular
society
um I think it connects to social media
culture let me read a quick summary I'm
taking this from Wikipedia of what he
means by the spectacle society the
spectacle is the inverted image of
society in which relations between
commodities have supplanted relations
between people in which passive
identification with the spectacle
supplants genuine activity the spectacle
is not a collection of images the boore
writes rather it is a social relation
among people mediated by images all
right so that's of course how like
French Marxist critical theorist wrote
but like the idea here is he's talking
about you have this sort of like um this
new falsely this society that exists
between it's like the relationships
between these over-the-top like images
and commodities that relate to each
other it's not actual society of humans
interacting with humans. That's kind of
the social media internet age. I mean,
he argues that that helps uh, you know,
keep the capitalist imperatives in place
and hoodwink the bgeoisi to thinking
that they're happy when they're really
just allowing the proletariat to be
stepped on. We can give other analyses
for it, but uh, I think there's
something there. I think it's really
interesting, right? Like society is
mediated between like images and memes
and ideas that are floating around is
it's not people talking to people
anymore. And I don't think now it's
because of like some sort of capitalist
imperative. I think it's, you know,
there's a profit-making imperative for
these companies, but a lot of the harm
it causes, I think like the harm caused
by like the modern social media
spectacle society, um, is not harm
that's directed directly at it then
loops back and helps the owners of those
companies make more money. It just has a
lot of harmless side effects.
So like replacing a society with a
special society is good for stockholders
in those companies, but a lot of the
harms that are created are just also
just is like the side effects of doing
that of making life virtual and
disembodied and digital. So I don't
know, he was probably on to something. A
smarter analyst than me should go write
this would be like a Harper's essay.
Someone should write like a Harper's
essay about revisiting Deborah. It' be
you'd be a lot you'd be doing a lot of
like intellectual flexing in that essay.
I can imagine it now. Um, and you smoke
a cigarette and shave your head and just
be like, "These guys are wimps." That's
my impression of the postmodernist.
You know, all right, nerd.
Yeah, I get it. It's the the the wheels
of history, right, nerd?
Why don't you go write in your little
red book, nerd?
Meaning's an illusion. Like those old
postmodernist smart guys. All right,
that's all the time we have for today. I
know you like to hear more postmodernist
impressions, but once we get to those
impressions is when Jesse gives you the
high sign that we got to shut this down.
So, thanks for listening. We'll be back
next week with another episode. And
until then, as always, stay deep. Hey,
if you like today's discussion about how
technology has undermined long thinking,
you might also like episode 370,
which is about deep work, a related
concept in the age of AI. Check it out.
I think you'll like it. But what about
the more practical promise?
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