Intention Filters
Before fully investing myself in a new undertaking, I attempt to whittle away flaws, identify weak points, and allow myself to consider setting the concept aside, completely, if warranted.
In practice, this might mean that I’ve dreamt up some new project or lifestyle experiment that seems like it could be interesting to pursue. Or it might mean I’ve thought up a book that seems worth writing, or an essay that may prove worthwhile.
Starting with the initial concept, I try to establish, first, if the idea is something that I actually want to pursue, and whether it’s something that fits within the context of my larger collection of needs and ambitions.
It may be interesting and useful to pursue a medical degree, but would that allow me to continue living the flexible lifestyle I enjoy? Would it leave me time to learn about other things and pursue other projects alongside it?
Probably not. Thus, I can safely set that ambition aside, as it doesn’t currently fit within the lifestyle superstructure I’ve built for myself, and—for the moment, at least—want to maintain.
This could someday, but a gut-check at this point in the filtering process tells me whether this new potential direction is worth giving up or fundamentally adjusting all the other things currently shaping my work and habits.
Next, I typically focus on whether the thing I’m considering is actually a valuable undertaking.
It may be that it’s interesting and challenging for me, but not really worth much of anything beyond that metric.
It may be that it’s potentially valuable for other people, but not particularly compelling or growth-oriented, for me.
It’s absolutely okay to do something that provides value for just you, or just for someone else. But it’s prudent to be aware of this one-sidedness before jumping in, as it may mean you’ll want to rebalance other aspects of your life to avoid flattening your internal and external progress and contributions.
After that, I generally suss out if I’m the right person to do this thing: to forward this particular idea or project.
In some cases, at this stage, I’ll realize that the thing I wanted to build already exists, and it’s actually way higher-quality than I would have been able to muster. Which is often a good thing, as I can then make use of that existing tool without having to build it myself, first.
In some cases (quite often, actually) I’ll discover that someone else has already done something similar to what I’m intending, but I still think it would be a valuable pursuit, for me, because of what I’ll learn along the way or because I’ll be able to put my own spin on the concept.
And in some cases I’ll find that no one’s tried what I’m thinking about trying: which can be beneficial, in that I won’t be comparing myself to someone else if I choose to pursue it, but also less than ideal at times because it may mean there’s a good reason no one’s taken that path before. It’s also unlikely there will be any maps to check if I get lost along the way.
The final stage of this filtration technique usually involves either setting the concept aside—maybe indefinitely, but maybe just for later, for reassessment at a different stage of my life—or figuring out the right point of entry.
Sometimes jumping right in is ideal: carving out time in my schedule, nudging other stuff to the periphery to make space for this new thing I want to focus on.
More often, though, I’ll stair-step my way into it, picking up a few books and courses on a new subject I want to learn, or planning out a week’s worth of outlining and research before I start writing the actual book.
There’s always a chance that, during those initial stages, I’ll learn something that will change the math I’ve done up until that point: the sieve catching something it previously missed, which then warrants recalibration.
Despite the potential for a last-minute amendment, though, I typically feel more confident committing to plans and projects because of these filtration layers. They allow me to establish, bare-minimum, that what I’m working on will be valuable in some way, will fit within the lifestyle choices I’ve consciously made, and is either conceptually fresh or a worthwhile reinvention.
Your questions—your filters—will likely be different from mine, but it’s worth having a rough set of conceptual strainers handy for when insight or inspiration hits, so that you’re less likely to struggle with how to invest your limited cognitive and chronological resources.
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If you found some value in this essay, and if you’re in the financial position to do so, consider buying me a coffee.
Due to my lack of going anywhere new or doing much of anything worth photographing, of late, I’m sharing photos from a pile of Colin-stuff my parents have stockpiled over the years, this week. Here’s an illustration of an orc I made back in high school.
Projects
This week on Brain Lenses I published an essay about The Half-Life of Knowledge, and a podcast episode about Groupthink.
This week’s episode of Let’s Know Things is about Abe’s Japan (along with a brief history of the country).
Community
If you’d like to share something about your life at the moment—for potential inclusion in a future newsletter or just to chat privately with a stranger from the internet—you can reach me at colin@exilelifestyle.com.
A very young me looking none too pleased about having to shill for a petroleum company.
Interesting & Useful
Some neat things:
Winamp Skin Museum(visual, retro-joy)
Design Out Waste(how might you make the perfect toaster?)
Globe Making(1955 video of the process)
Glass / Glas(beautifully produced 1958 video of the glass-making process)
Cracker Jack Prizes(interesting rundown of these now-antiques)
Congolese Dandies (vivid photo collection of dapper people)
For more interesting things of this kind, pop on over to Curiosity Gadget.
Outro
I’m still chugging along with some medical things: I have a doctor’s appointment today, and will be getting some surgical stuff sorted out over the next few weeks.
I’m sincerely hoping by the end of the month to be mostly just recovering, but we’ll see how it goes. This is very unfamiliar territory for me—I’ve been fortunate, health-wise, pretty much my entire life—so wading my way past the unknowns and uncertainties will be as valuable and heartening as getting it all over and done with, I think.
I’ve still been chugging along with Let’s Know Things and Brain Lenses, of course, and managed to get my blog and project site redesigned in the midst of all this. But I’m looking forward to recommitting to a few other projects that have been in limbo for far too long: they’re pre-filtered as being worth doing, I just need to be able to establish a rhythm for working on them, and that hasn’t been super-possible for a few months. Fingers crossed that will change very soon :)
Working on anything interesting at the moment? Have any big plans on the horizon? How’re things going in your part of the world?
Drop me a line and tell me what’s been on your mind.
I respond to every message I get and would love to hear from you—whether that means talking about something you’re working on, telling me how things have been, practically, for the past half-year, or just decompressing a bit to a stranger from the internet.
You can reach me at: colin@exilelifestyle.com
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