Recently I came across an advice on blogging by John Sonmez – he recommends those
willing to maintain a personal blog to post there regularly – best of all,
according to a strict schedule. As a mature blogger and, at the same time, an
athlete, he definitely knows what he’s talking about. On the other hand, in the last post I mentioned that employment made my life more ‘scheduled’ in a way
that seems positive to me. This makes me search for some reason making
regularities desired for us and helpful in achieving our goals.
First, it
is easy to note that the things we do regularly determine what we are in the
eyes of others. For instance, you are considered a software developer if you
devote several days a week to software engineering activities. The same way,
one is called an alcoholic if and only if they drink a lot of spirits and do
that on a daily basis (more or less). However, obviously, John didn’t mean this
simple fact – i.e. if you post every day, you are a blogger, period – advising
to blog regularly. Similarly, I like the fact that now I work from 11 a.m. till
8 p.m. on average not merely because doing so allows me to deem
myself a proper citizen, but because this gives me finer control over my life,
and that is what makes following certain patterns in a constant and consistent
manner so important.
Actually,
regular behavior is what allows for fine control. The nature of this idea can
be seen clearly when one views it the way control theorists and machine
learners do. For those who build automated systems control is all about
minimizing error – the difference between the observed and the desired
behavior. What makes the engineering approach so
valuable is that it begins with acknowledging the possibility – or, better,
inevitability – of errors. The idea to do so is as obvious as different from
what people (including me) usually do – when deciding to start something new we
tend to believe that we’ll succeed easily and quickly, and the sun will shine.
While the latter assumption is certainly true, there is a problem with the
former – we do fail.
Let’s
follow the engineer’s path: say we prepared ourselves for failing and are ready
to go – what does it have to do with regularities? The trick is that to succeed
one needs to fail a lot and to do that on a regular basis, thus opening the
doors to controlling things. Achieving one’s goals is made possible by the
flow of information generated by doing something regularly. Only if you continuously
get this information it can help you move closer to your goals. Not only setting
up a schedule of blog posts allows one to know instantly when they fail and
to react as soon as possible – it permits
looking back and understanding the nature of one’s mistakes, making it possible
to perform better in future. Furthermore, one shouldn’t forget that we, humans, are in fact
sophisticated control systems and behave, to some extent, in the same
error-minimizing fashion. When we deviate from a well-established behavior pattern,
we tend to return to it unconsciously. That is, we develop habits and this is another
reason to evenly divide the way to your targets into carefully defined steps.
Having said
this, I can easily explain why getting employed feels so positive to me even if
I don’t take into consideration the obvious benefits of a challenging and
well-paid job. Surprisingly, the great part is that the job takes a great deal
of my time and does that in a regular manner. Combined with the time spent on commuting,
having breakfast and lunch, plus some other ‘transactional expenses’, this
leaves me with approximately 3 to 4 hours each working day to do some cool and valuable
stuff not related to work. Knowing this figure and realizing that it won’t change,
I am free from illusions of having a lot of time to tackle everything I want.
Even more, whenever (quite often) I fail to spend this free time on something
worthy I know precisely how much I lose. With this same principle applying to
other resources – say, money – as well, I now have a lot of information to be more
manageable.
Keeping all
this stuff in my head, I do not search to eliminate any uncertainties and 'free will'
completely, since that is both impossible and boring. Still, I believe that in
case I want to succeed in something, I should work toward my aims regularly –
with close to constant pace and in carefully allocated timeframes. This is almost as important as knowing precisely where I want to arrive.
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