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Deep Work Rules for focused success in a distracted world ( PDFDrive.com )

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here succinctly: All of my time and attention are spoken for—several times

over. Please do not ask for them.

To further justify this policy, Stephenson wrote an essay titled “Why I Am a Bad

Correspondent.” At the core of his explanation for his inaccessibility is the following

decision:

The productivity equation is a non-linear one, in other words. This accounts

for why I am a bad correspondent and why I very rarely accept speaking

engagements. If I organize my life in such a way that I get lots of long,

consecutive, uninterrupted time-chunks, I can write novels. But as those

chunks get separated and fragmented, my productivity as a novelist drops

spectacularly.

Stephenson sees two mutually exclusive options: He can write good novels at a

regular rate, or he can answer a lot of individual e-mails and attend conferences, and

as a result produce lower-quality novels at a slower rate. He chose the former option,

and this choice requires him to avoid as much as possible any source of shallow work

in his professional life. (This issue is so important to Stephenson that he went on to

explore its implications—positive and negative—in his 2008 science fiction epic,

Anathem, which considers a world where an intellectual elite live in monastic orders,

isolated from the distracted masses and technology, thinking deep thoughts.)

In my experience, the monastic philosophy makes many knowledge workers

defensive. The clarity with which its adherents identify their value to the world, I

suspect, touches a raw nerve for those whose contribution to the information economy

is more complex. Notice, of course, that “more complex” does not mean “lesser.” A

high-level manager, for example, might play a vital role in the functioning of a billiondollar

company, even if she cannot point to something discrete, like a completed

novel, and say, “This is what I produced this year.” Therefore, the pool of individuals

to whom the monastic philosophy applies is limited—and that’s okay. If you’re

outside this pool, its radical simplicity shouldn’t evince too much envy. On the other

hand, if you’re inside this pool—someone whose contribution to the world is discrete,

clear, and individualized * —then you should give this philosophy serious

consideration, as it might be the deciding factor between an average career and one

that will be remembered.

The Bimodal Philosophy of Deep Work Scheduling

This book opened with a story about the revolutionary psychologist and thinker Carl

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