Back from minicamp. I want to work on social skills and social aversion, and ability to start tasks and get things done, and I want to optimize the crap out of my meetup (vancouver).
So here's what I did:
I talked to people on the airplane and asked for favours when I wanted them on the way home (borrowing pens and such). That was awesome and I had some conversations that I would not have otherwise had.
I'm going to start using the Pomodoro (half hour on, 5 mins off) method to flood my start-task aversion and improve my scheduling.
I have much more stuff to try and I will report when I get something more inspiring than "here are all these things I want to try"
Background: I and many other attendees at the CFAR rationality minicamp last weekend learned a lot about applied rationality, and made big personal lists of things we wanted to try out in our everyday lives. I think that a regular (weekly or maybe semi-weekly) post where people mention any new interesting habits, decisions, and actions they have taken recently would be cool as a supplement to this; it ought to be rewarding for people to be able to write a list of the cool things they did, and I expect it'll also be interesting for other people to peek in and see the sorts of goals and self-modifications people are working on. Others at minicamp seemed enthusiastic about the idea, so I hope it takes off. Feel free to meta-discuss whether this is a good idea or if it can be done better.
Addendum 5/15: By the way, non-minicamp people should feel free to post too! I am highly certain that minicamp attendees are not the only ones working on interesting things in their lives.
This is the public group instrumental rationality diary for the week of May 14th. It's a place to record and chat about it if you have done, or are actively doing, things like:
Or anything else interesting which you want to share, so that other people can think about it, and perhaps be inspired to take action themselves. Try to include enough details so that everyone can use each other's experiences to learn about what tends to work out, and what doesn't tend to work out.
Discussion's likely to continue gradually through the week, so try to remember to check back now and then!