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- title: Writing and timing
- lang: en
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- > Whenever someone asks me to do something that I think seems ill-conceived in some way, I ask them to write it down. That's it. Because writing is high effort. Making sentences is the easy bit, it's the thinking I want them to do. By considering their request it slows them down. Maybe 30% of the time or something, they come back and say ‘oh, that thing I asked you to do, I've had a think and it's fine, we don't need to do it’.
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- > This little method isn't about doing less. Well, actually it is. It's about doing *less important* things instead of important things. It's not about being obstructive. I certainly don't ask someone ‘why?’ five times (which is a shortcut to being called a smart-arse in my experience). This is about a light-touch way of asking someone to slow down.
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- > <cite>*[Write it down](https://markboulton.co.uk/journal/write-it-down)* ([cache](/david/cache/627671da423ba9cc970d26b66917ae0e/))</cite>
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- This is something I try to apply to myself. When something gets too difficult to think about with too many options and implications I try to write it down. Following one lead and see what it produces once put into (digital) ink.
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- Sometimes, it allows me to trash the idea quicker than expected. Sometimes, it allows me to iterate with other people on a concrete thing. I found it quite effective, especially to calm down and breathe during tough times.
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