What time of day are you least instrumentally rational?
(Instrumental rationality = systematically achieving your values.)
A couple months ago, I noticed that I was consistently spending time in ways I didn’t endorse when I got home after dinner around 8pm. From then until about 2-3am, I would be pretty unproductive, often have some life admin thing I should do but was procrastinating on, doomscroll, not do anything particularly fun, etc.
Noticing this was the biggest step to solving it. I spent a little while thinking about how to fix it, and it’s not like an immediate solution popped into mind, but I’m pretty sure it took me less than half an hour to come up with a strategy I was excited about. (Work for an extra hour at the office 7:30-8:30, walk home by 9, go for a run and shower by 10, work another hour until 11, deliberately chill until my sleep time of about 1:30. With plenty of exceptions for days with other evening plans.) I then committed to this strategy mentally, especially hard for the first couple days because I thought that would help with habit formation. I succeeded, and it felt great, and I’ve stuck to it reasonably well since then. Even without sticking to it perfectly, this felt like a massive improvement. (Adding two consistent, isolated hours of daily work is something that had worked very well for me before too.)
So I suspect the question at the top might be useful for others to consider too.
Intuitively, when I’m more tired or most stressed. I would guess that is most likely in the morning—if often have to get up earlier than I like. This excludes getting woken up unexpectedly in the middle of the night, which is known to mess with people’s minds.
I tried to use my hourly Anki performance, but it seems very flat, except indeed for a dip a 6 AM, but that could be lack of data (70 samples).
Great question! This might be a good exercise to actually journal to see how right/wrong I am.
Most days I would assume look like a bellcurve: This is assuming an unstructured day with no set-in-stone commitments—nowhere to be. My mornings I might expect to be very unproductive until mid-afternoon (2pm to 4pm). I rarely have “Eureka” moments (which I would hope tend to be more rational decisions) but when I do, they are mid-afternoon, but I also seem to have the wherewithall to actually complete tasks. Eureka Moments always cause a surge of activity. If I have a short dinner break then this usually can last until 9pm.
Now, when I’m editing a video that is implicitly related to my career goals. Video Edit days probably look more like a sawtooth wave. I edit at home. When I’m editing a particularly involved video I will often start around 10am or earlier. I tend to work in 45-60 minute blocks on and off throughout the afternoon. I might return sometimes around 8 or 9 for a final push of editing. or at least I’ll journal my thoughts/progress/to-do for the next day.
You may have identified a meta-problem: I do not have a system to be achieving my goals every day. Somedays—like when I have a video to edit—I will be actively working towards them. Most days, I don’t.
Why do I start so many hours earlier when I have a video edit to do? I’m guessing it’s as simple as there is a clear plan broken down into actions. My instrumental rationality—as opposed to meaningless or timesink activity—is directly proportional to how granular a plan is, and how specifically it is broken down into actionable steps.
What time of day are you least instrumentally rational?
(Instrumental rationality = systematically achieving your values.)
A couple months ago, I noticed that I was consistently spending time in ways I didn’t endorse when I got home after dinner around 8pm. From then until about 2-3am, I would be pretty unproductive, often have some life admin thing I should do but was procrastinating on, doomscroll, not do anything particularly fun, etc.
Noticing this was the biggest step to solving it. I spent a little while thinking about how to fix it, and it’s not like an immediate solution popped into mind, but I’m pretty sure it took me less than half an hour to come up with a strategy I was excited about. (Work for an extra hour at the office 7:30-8:30, walk home by 9, go for a run and shower by 10, work another hour until 11, deliberately chill until my sleep time of about 1:30. With plenty of exceptions for days with other evening plans.) I then committed to this strategy mentally, especially hard for the first couple days because I thought that would help with habit formation. I succeeded, and it felt great, and I’ve stuck to it reasonably well since then. Even without sticking to it perfectly, this felt like a massive improvement. (Adding two consistent, isolated hours of daily work is something that had worked very well for me before too.)
So I suspect the question at the top might be useful for others to consider too.
Intuitively, when I’m more tired or most stressed. I would guess that is most likely in the morning—if often have to get up earlier than I like. This excludes getting woken up unexpectedly in the middle of the night, which is known to mess with people’s minds.
I tried to use my hourly Anki performance, but it seems very flat, except indeed for a dip a 6 AM, but that could be lack of data (70 samples).
Great question! This might be a good exercise to actually journal to see how right/wrong I am.
Most days I would assume look like a bellcurve: This is assuming an unstructured day with no set-in-stone commitments—nowhere to be. My mornings I might expect to be very unproductive until mid-afternoon (2pm to 4pm). I rarely have “Eureka” moments (which I would hope tend to be more rational decisions) but when I do, they are mid-afternoon, but I also seem to have the wherewithall to actually complete tasks. Eureka Moments always cause a surge of activity. If I have a short dinner break then this usually can last until 9pm.
Now, when I’m editing a video that is implicitly related to my career goals. Video Edit days probably look more like a sawtooth wave. I edit at home. When I’m editing a particularly involved video I will often start around 10am or earlier. I tend to work in 45-60 minute blocks on and off throughout the afternoon. I might return sometimes around 8 or 9 for a final push of editing. or at least I’ll journal my thoughts/progress/to-do for the next day.
You may have identified a meta-problem: I do not have a system to be achieving my goals every day. Somedays—like when I have a video to edit—I will be actively working towards them. Most days, I don’t.
Why do I start so many hours earlier when I have a video edit to do? I’m guessing it’s as simple as there is a clear plan broken down into actions. My instrumental rationality—as opposed to meaningless or timesink activity—is directly proportional to how granular a plan is, and how specifically it is broken down into actionable steps.