Readwise has an amazing reader app, much more powerful than Google (that I used to love way back when) The app is simply called Reader and that's what I use to read your newsletter 😁
Was loving this read then saw my name pop up, thanks for including me!
1) Love PowerPoint Paul getting back in action
2) I watched Tim on Colin and Samir and appreciated you highlighting those points as they stuck out to me and were a powerful reminder
3) Loved the time management quote you pulled from “The Harried Leisure Class” -- it reminds me a lot of Oliver Burkeman’s take in “Four Thousand Weeks.”
I’ve come to think there are levels to the time management game. At some point, you master the first couple of levels but then become concerned with how you spend every minute of your day, which is anxiety inducing. So you then need to let go of the control of time to pass to the next level, or something like that.
"People think about compounding growth but rarely compounding indifference!" This simple sentence packs a treatise on the necessity of working from Purpose into just a few words. It's brilliant, because we already know and love the idea of compounding growth, and the notion of applying that compounding principle in the opposite direction does such a great job of communicating the crushing weight that indifference has, over time, in real life.
Wow, love the deck you created on publishing options! What an incredible resource. Thanks for creating and sharing it so generously.
Definitely! Gotta make some slides every once in a while. 😂
Readwise has an amazing reader app, much more powerful than Google (that I used to love way back when) The app is simply called Reader and that's what I use to read your newsletter 😁
Big fan of readwise! Was a different time back in 2009 though. Miss it.
Was loving this read then saw my name pop up, thanks for including me!
1) Love PowerPoint Paul getting back in action
2) I watched Tim on Colin and Samir and appreciated you highlighting those points as they stuck out to me and were a powerful reminder
3) Loved the time management quote you pulled from “The Harried Leisure Class” -- it reminds me a lot of Oliver Burkeman’s take in “Four Thousand Weeks.”
I’ve come to think there are levels to the time management game. At some point, you master the first couple of levels but then become concerned with how you spend every minute of your day, which is anxiety inducing. So you then need to let go of the control of time to pass to the next level, or something like that.
"People think about compounding growth but rarely compounding indifference!" This simple sentence packs a treatise on the necessity of working from Purpose into just a few words. It's brilliant, because we already know and love the idea of compounding growth, and the notion of applying that compounding principle in the opposite direction does such a great job of communicating the crushing weight that indifference has, over time, in real life.