Cups of Water

Imagine you have a pitcher with 3 cups of water in it. On the table are two empty glasses, each of which can hold 2 cups of water. With the water in your pitcher, you cannot fill both cups.

A reasonable discussion can be had about which cup you should fill and which you shouldn’t, or whether you should perhaps not fill either cup all the way, but you cannot fill both cups.

A reasonable discussion can be had about how you’re making the above decision, but you cannot fill both cups.

A reasonable discussion can be had about how you get water into the pitcher in the first place, whether you should be able to get more, and how you might do so; but with the water in the pitcher, you cannot fill both cups.

A reasonable discussion can be had about whether or not you wasted some water that was in the pitcher previously, perhaps by spilling it accidentally or deliberately pouring it somewhere else, but in the here and now you cannot fill both cups.

Sometimes – not always but sometimes – you get people who don’t want to have any of those reasonable discussions. They just want to yell about the fact that both cups aren’t full and act as if it’s happening either because the person holding the pitcher isn’t pouring harder or because 3 cups of water actually can fill two 2-cup containers if you believe hard enough.

Those people are unreasonable. Look for those who aren’t, and solve the problem with them.

Clarinet Positive

People often avoid demonstrating a skill because they’re self-conscious about it. They don’t think it’s good enough or they worry about what others will think of it, so they hold it back. You may have done this.

I am absolutely, completely, 100% NOT self-conscious about my clarinet playing. You could insult me about it and I wouldn’t bat an eye. You could say I’m the worst clarinet player in the world and it wouldn’t phase me at all; I am immune to such barbs and the thought of being exposed to them wouldn’t cost me a second of sleep. Why?

I don’t play the clarinet.

It’s not even a skill I have. I’ve never claimed to have it, so no one can call me a liar. I’ve never put a second of work into it, so I can’t worry that I’ve wasted a second of work. I cannot be judged, I cannot fail, I cannot be unfavorably compared to another clarinet player.

Do you realize what that means?

It means that self-consciousness is an indicator of competence.

The skills you feel self-conscious about are the skills you’ve invested in emotionally. It has to be that way – without emotional investment, there’s nothing to feel self-conscious about. But that same investment is also likely paired with time and practice, so the very skills you’re most self-conscious of are the same skills you’ve spent the most time practicing and improving.

So if you don’t feel very confident about something – great! That means it’s probably among your best skills, and you’re well on your way to being absolutely wonderful at it. You’re certainly much better already than you think you are.

And no matter what, you’re a better clarinet player than I am.

New Month’s Resolution – June 2023

Happy New Month!

If you borrowed someone else’s body for a year – someone you cared about deeply – how would you return it? If they were kind enough to lend it to you, would you be careless with it? Fill it with garbage, let it go to waste, lock it inside? Or would you be a good steward for your loved one, and return their body to them in great condition?

This month, that’s my resolution – to treat my future self as a loved one whose body I am temporarily borrowing. I will base my sleeping, eating, and movement habits on that philosophy. I hope to give the Johnny of July a better body than I borrowed from the Johnny of May.

Good luck in your own resolutions!

Out of How Many?

Imagine you’re playing a trivia game. Every time you give a right answer you get a dollar, and every time you give a wrong answer you lose a dollar. Imagine your strategy for such a game. If it were me, I’d make sure I only attempted to answer questions where I was pretty sure (at least 51%, anyway) that I knew the right answer. If I started to get a few wrong, I’d adjust my confidence levels. If I had gotten a good number right then I might loosen up a little, but I’d still base my strategy on what I knew.

Now, imagine a trivia game with slightly different rules: every time you give a right answer you get a dollar, and every time you give a wrong answer nothing happens. Your strategy would be very different, wouldn’t it? If it were me, I’d buzz in every single time and I’d spout off as many answers as the rules allowed. If I could guess more than one time per question I’d just start shouting random words and phrases if I didn’t know the answer. Why not?

Now here’s the hack: Life is a lot more like the second game.

Most of the time, being “right” about something nets you some positive reward, but being wrong doesn’t lose you anything. If you ask out a hundred people and one says yes and gives you a wonderful relationship, the other 99 don’t take anything away. If you tell a hundred people that they look like exactly the person that needs to buy the widget you’re selling and one of them agrees, then you sold one widget – and the other 99 people don’t take anything away.

This is also a nasty trick if used for evil. Be aware of it. People will say things like “20 people died after getting this shot!” as if that was meaningful. You go: “Oh wow, 20 people!” But guess what? If I ask enough, I can find 20 people who died after eating a carrot, too. The eight million I asked who didn’t know anyone who died from carrot consumption? They don’t factor in, because they didn’t take anything away from my “study.” So be careful; you have to ask about the secret denominator.

But there’s the thing. For better or worse, the denominator is often invisible. We care about the number of times you get it right, not the number of total attempts. Most games allow unlimited replays, and the only cost is your time. That’s helpful to you when you’re trying to get things done; it’s hurtful to you if you aren’t aware of other people pulling a fast one.

Asking “out of how many” is good practice. For yourself, it can improve your performance, even though you should always remember your goal is a higher number of “rates per time” not a higher ratio of “rights to wrongs.” And for others, it can keep them honest – or at least keep yourself aware.

High Exposure

Lots of things in the world are dangerous. In virtually every case, the only way to make them less dangerous is to get exposure to them.

Driving a car is dangerous! We definitely shouldn’t take someone who has never even seen a car before and stick them behind the wheel on a busy freeway. And yet, people do get behind the wheel on busy freeways all the time. How do we manage? By getting small doses of exposure to the danger of driving in safe(r) environments.

It’s the same with literally everything. The wild, unconstrained internet can be a dangerous place for the uninitiated. So… initiate them. Small doses, careful training. Progressively larger cages until freedom.

The freakin’ stove is dangerous, man. Crossing the street is dangerous. Driving a forklift is dangerous. Handling chemicals or snakes or guns is dangerous. It’s all dangerous.

Life is danger. It’s constantly trying to kill you. The path to survival is exposure to it.

Rocks & Buckets

Here is a framework for thinking about larger projects, the kinds that often take extended periods of time and different sub-projects to complete.

First, figure out the individual “buckets” that need to be filled in order to complete the project. For example, if you’re trying to plan a party, you might need a “Manage the Guest List” bucket, a “Plan the Activities” bucket, a “Purchase Supplies” bucket, etc. The party doesn’t happen unless each bucket gets filled.

The “bucket” system is helpful because it helps you not only organize actions, but it helps you eliminate them. If you think of some activity you feel like you “should” do, you can ask: “What bucket does this help fill?” If you can’t immediately figure out which bucket it is, then you have to ask a second question: “Does that mean I missed a bucket, or does that mean I shouldn’t do this thing?

(It is very often the latter!)

Next, for each bucket, there are likely barriers. Things in the way of you completing your task of filling that bucket. We’ll call them “rocks,” because they make the bucket feel heavy and full, but they aren’t what you actually need. The “Manage the Guest List” bucket might have a big rock in it labeled “Janet and Bill really don’t get along.” It might have a small rock in it labeled “I don’t have Mirabel’s new phone number.” But these rocks all have to be removed.

It can be tough to figure out which rocks need the most immediate attention, but here’s an easy question: “If I don’t remove this rock, what happens?” It seems obvious, but whenever a task seems like it should be done, we frequently skip that question. Many little pebbles won’t hurt your overall effort, but some of the biggest rocks will completely derail you.

If you start a project by labeling:

  1. Which buckets need to be filled?
  2. What activities fill them?
  3. What rocks need to be removed?

You’re well on your way to staying clear and focused.

Out of the Blue

With every interaction you have with another human, you’re plunging them into a mystery.

You begin with a statement, and now the other person has this puzzle to solve: “Where is this coming from?”

Remember, in order for you to take the initiative to talk to another human, a whole lot of things had to happen. All of those events, questions, thoughts, and feelings that strung together to inspire you to go talk to Bob from Accounting or your Aunt Susan or whoever? You witnessed and experienced them. The other person did not.

So the other person has no idea what’s happening, they don’t know the context. And when humans don’t know something, they assume.

These assumptions are often uncharitable!

Masting the art of “providing context” is mastering the art of effective communication. If you want a little extra practice, consider asking yourself a few questions just before you start a new interaction with someone else. Imagine they ask you, right away, “Why are you asking/telling me this?” How would you respond? Build that explanation into your original statement and you’ll save a lot of time and effort.

A second practice question involves assuming resistance. What if they say: “I don’t have time to help you with this. Why should it be my priority?” Give that one a lot of thought, and build your response in as well. This one is extra good because it also helps filter out conversations that don’t value the other person’s time!

Try these exercises this week, and watch your interactions grow in effectiveness. Don’t let them just drop out of the blue.

Joyful Time

My yard was full of children today, an event that always brings me great joy. I genuinely love the hours when my home is the center of people’s fun. I love gathering friends around a table for a meal or for games, I love having children running through my house as they play, and I love when family laughs within these walls.

Joy is, almost always, chaos. I don’t love chaos – I love my orderly neatness, my quiet control. But I love these joyous moments of chaos more, all the same. I wouldn’t give them up; in fact, I work hard to foster them.

The beautiful thing about the joy of others is that it becomes your joy by simple proximity. All you have to do is let it wash over you, and you can have it all without diminishing it in others. That’s worth making the time for.

Can’t Help You

No matter how much you want this not to be true, there will always be some people you can’t help.

This is a painful experience. Some of those people actually want your help – or at least, they think they do. They’re the hardest ones. Some people need your help but don’t want it, and it’s a little easier there.

But in any case, grappling with the limits of your powers is never fun. You, however, are finite – you have a limited capacity to help. Regardless of the pain, remember that you have to put your time and effort where it will have the greatest impact. As hard as it is, identify and act, then move on. Do what you can, but don’t do what you can’t.

Unfair Trials

If you knew the odds, you wouldn’t play.

Imagine a great wheel for you to spin. ‘Round and ’round it goes, stopping on one of a hundred different sections. 99 of them contain a painful shock for you – the last contains all your dreams made manifest.

One in a hundred isn’t exactly great odds. If you knew them, it might be reasonable to be afraid of the shocks, avoid the pain.

It’s a good thing you don’t know them, then. It’s a good thing you think the odds are maybe one in ten or better – and the shocks aren’t that bad, anyway.

What you must endure in order to see your dreams become real is too much. Too much to bear… all at once. But you don’t have to do it all at once. Spin the wheel once, take your shock. Grow stronger. Spin again tomorrow.

Grow stronger.

Forget the odds.