Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
”What’s 43 Folders?”
43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
Summer routine -- advice?
Dan Grover | May 30 2006
This summer will be a unique opportunity for me. I'll have finished high school, I'll still be living with my folks (i.e. free rent, food), and I'll have lots of time to work on constructive things and have fun. I don't know why this has never occured to me before during any other summer, but it has now. The major focus of my efforts this summer will be: 1) working on my software business and freelance jobs that come up, 2) learning several topics I'm interested in and reading an assload of books, 3) maintaining a completely consistent exercise routine and losing weight. 4) community service This is pretty ambitious, but I figure this is a unique opportunity to accomplish some great stuff. In past summers, I've worked on projects that have turned out well, but spent most of my time at a summer job. So this will be great if I can get my ass in gear and set up a routine. Anyway, my challenge now is trying to figure out a routine for this. I've figured I ought to get up at some painfully early hour every day and start to work, give myself a lunch break, etc. But in many ways, treating it like a 9-5 would suck, because it might make me not only waste time, but waste my own time, which is even worse. One idea I've had mild success with in the midst of the usual senioritus is insisting to myself that I engage in some kind of "constructive activity" -- homework, organizing, reading, journaling, whatever. So I was thinking I ought to schedule periods of that, and then have a "credit" system sort of like that Printable CEO guy has. So I'm posting, asking for some advice here, because I figure a good portion of people here have been in the situation (eg freelancers, writers) of having a lot of completely blank days and having to make them worthwhile. Your thoughts? 8 Comments
POSTED IN:
As a young person, you...Submitted by sonia_simone on June 26, 2006 - 10:09am.
As a young person, you might just need more sleep. Adolescents need a ton of sleep, and physiologically they're just not wired to get up early. You may be feeling some hangover effects from that at your advanced age. (if I used smilies there would be one here) I'd say experiment with what makes you feel best and most productive. If you can have a kickass day by getting up at 10:00, that's smarter than shuffling through a braindead day because you made yourself get up at 8:30. (And Pavlina is a mutant. I'm sure he is a nice mutant, but I don't think most humans can do what he did with regards to sleep.) » POSTED IN:
|
|
EXPLORE 43Folders | THE GOOD STUFF |