Conversation

A typical daily video has 150k+ views! There is *fan art*! There’s an encouraging chat full of other students. Other students’ video streams are picture-in-picture on the wall. There’s something very powerful about watching someone exhibit intensely focused behavior.
2
4
155
That is: it’s one thing to read a self-help book on Deep Work or Atomic Habits, full of deeply-considered models and techniques; it’s another thing—maybe an emotionally more powerful thing!—to internalize those practices implicitly by watching them in action.
1
5
162
Replying to
I’m hesitant about this kind of media. It can shade into willpower / motivation porn, particularly when centered on externally-provided curricula. James disavows this ("I don’t believe in motivation. It’s volatile.”), but it’s still there, in part at least.
3
2
72
There’s a funny tension: part of the point of such streams is to help remind you (and the streamer!) to stay “on task.” Don’t check Twitter! This is usually good. But… Twitter is an essential part of curiosity-driven knowledge work! (Sometimes, when used in a careful way…)
2
2
86
To put it another way: it would be very bad to insist on “not getting distracted” by ideas and conversations which seem unrelated to my “main research focus.” But most of my surfing really is just displacement activity; there’s a fine line, and I often can’t see it in the moment.
2
3
69
My best heuristic is to consolidate such behaviors: surf in a solid block, in the evening, when low-energy. But this often means suppressing meaningful curiosity-impulses throughout the day! Dicey!
4
1
93
This Tweet is from an account that no longer exists. Learn more
Show replies
This Tweet was deleted by the Tweet author. Learn more