Author's note: this post was written on Sunday, Oct. 19th. Its sequel will be written on Sunday, Oct. 27th.
Last night, I went to bed content with a fun and eventful weekend gone by. This morning, I woke up, took a shower, did my morning exercises, and began eat breakfast before making the commute up to work.
At the breakfast table, though, I was surprised to learn that it was Sunday, not Monday. I had misremembered what day it was and in fact had an entire day ahead of me with nothing on the agenda. At first, this wasn't very interesting, but then I started thinking. What to do with an entirely free day, without any real routine?
I realized that I didn't particularly know what to do, so I decided that I would simply live a day without defaults. At each moment of the day, I would act only in accordance with my curiosity and genuine interest. If I noticed myself becoming bored, disinterested, or otherwise less than enthused about what was going on, I would stop doing it.
What I found was quite surprising. I spent much less time doing routine activities like reading the news and browsing discussion boards, and much more time doing things that I've "always wanted to get around to"-- meditation, trying out a new exercise routine, even just spending some time walking around outside and relaxing in the sun.
Further, this seemed to actually make me more productive. When I sat down to get some work done, it was because I was legitimately interested in finishing my work and curious as to whether I could use a new method I had thought up in order to solve it. I was able to resolve something that's been annoying me for a while in much less time than I thought it would take.
By the end of the day, I started thinking "is there any reason that I don't spend every day like this?" As far as I can tell, there isn't really. I do have a few work tasks that I consider relatively uninteresting, but there are multiple solutions to that problem that I suspect I can implement relatively easily.
My plan is to spend the next week doing the same thing that I did today and then report back. I'm excited to let you all know what I find!
It went very well - too well, in fact! Writing a LessWrong post did not feel alive to me, so I didn't do it.