Ditto on Autohotkey. It’s amazingly easy to learn and very useful. (eg. for making Yoda Timer windows anywhere with even the most basic of programming experience). I’ve taught it to quite a few people and would be happy to teach anyone if they want to schedule a call:
calendly.com/meetsquid
Space L Clottey
How to eradicate the desire to check time-wasting sites
After I shower, it’s 11:40pm and my hair has to try afterward
typo?
Thank you for the recommendations! +1 on Replacing Guilt. It is shockingly powerful. As for Atomic Habits, I’ve heard some very strong insistence that Tiny Habits is superior with less fluff.
The True Face of the Enemy
If you’re exhausted at the point when your alarm rings, then forcing yourself to wake up at the alarm clock can be pretty terrible for your health since you obviously need more sleep. Unfortunately alarm clocks are a necessity for a large amount of the population, but it is possible to pull back your sleep phase with things like morning sunlight and exercise so that you get closer to waking up at the time you need to naturally. I’m working on pulling back my sleep phase now.
At age 5 I am told that every single morning as we drove to school I said to my mother that it was a waste of time. Shockingly, she listened, and after a year of this she had found out about home education and made arrangements for me to be released.
That’s amazing, what a victory. I’m really glad that happened, freedom is great.
The truth will triumph—when? They never achieve anything. A cheap hope, better than despair? I disagree. Hope can induce passivity as easily as despair, two ways of changing your perception of the situation without changing the situation.
Thanks, I agree. I do not want to encourage passivity. Leaving it as purely dystopian, which it is, would likely have been better for that purpose. Thank you. I wonder if it’s too late to edit out the final bit?
As for concrete steps, talking about the thing is one of the steps, so that people can stop rationalising it and see it as wrong, to change from ‘Eh, school’s not perfectly but it’s mostly fine’ to ‘school is really actually quite terrible’. Unfortunately I don’t have an entire action plan, but user rajlego and I are first working towards that, currently mostly based on memetics and creating a website we can point people to to thoroughly outline all the reasons school sucks in a cohesive and persuasive enough that the average parent can be linked to it and have their mind changed by the time they leave. Advice is appreciated.
Luckily in countries like the UK homeschooling is legal at the moment. So any parent convinced can make the local change, hopefully contributing to a tipping of the scales. Maybe. Theoretically. This text is also useful on views for how long compulsory schooling is going to last: School slavery will end soon—supermemo.guru
I think you’d get a lot of value out of using incremental reading, it improves the learning to memorisation workflow tremendously. Currently SuperMemo is the best at IR. (Post I wrote about this: https://gingerjumble.wordpress.com/2020/08/28/the-main-reason-you-should-switch-from-anki-to-supermemo/)
[Question] Most kinds of noise stress me out a lot, and I have a strong preference for silence. I tend to quickly notice quiet environments. Does this occur to anyone else? Any idea why?
Loved this, a lot of it made me laugh. Came here from searching ‘Naval’ to see if other people on LessWrong knew about him. He’s a gem of wisdom.
Calculated Clairvoyance
I think what I’m getting at is a desire for better self-awareness in people giving advice. I think it’s fine to give the alternative, brute force methodology version (step-by-step philosophy to happiness / probability theory) as a way to artifically make up for it in the absence of the original way of acquiring the skill (of happiness / future vision). So I think what Saphire’s doing is fine, except if it’s under the pretense that that’s how you actual acquired the skill in the first place, which I think reflects lack of self awareness.
Oh yes of course, perfect, thank you.
I used Anki for 3ish years and SuperMemo for the last year, and have to say I’ve liked SuperMemo exponentially more because of it’s incremental reading feature, where you put hundreds of sources to learn from (like lesswrong posts) into it, and go over them over time and can rank them by priority. Is far less of a pain to learn from things then making cards one by one.
Noticing the Value of Noticing Confusion
Stoicism vs the Methods of Rationality
Thank you very much for making this. It didn’t work for me on google play books before converting to mobi and back to epub using calibre. This is that version:
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1h5OeJPZFaUPeYFIn05Z50eOzdJvksGd_/view?usp=sharing
Ditto, this post in particular is very well explained.