As someone who hasn't fallen into (let's call it the meme pit of Discord), but sometimes does so for reddit:
Any tips for not doing that (or other unproductive things) as I begin to use it more?
Perhaps write out some rules or guidelines for Discord use and follow them for a period of time and see what works, what doesn't work, what you noticed, etc.? That's what I'm doing and having a set of written out rules or guidelines lets me refer to them and tweak them over time as I notice things about how they work or don't, or what nudges me in a good direction, etc. You asked for direct tips though, here's what I've found that helps me thus far:
I think if you have a good idea of when you're engaging with what kinds of content and partaking in which activities, that'll help increase your deliberate use of Discord (or other services / platforms too). Writing stuff down helps, cause you can more highly trust written memory than pure memory, I forget stuff all the time personally and rely heavily on writing and other memory prostheses.
I've done something similar to this
I found my overconsumption of reddit and YouTube distasteful as I was spending a majority of my day on these sites mindless scrolling or refreshing.
I ended up cutting them out entirely for about two weeks and felt much better, working through a backlog of books instead. but have since relapsed
I like the idea of writing summaries I think I will commit myself to that.
My book reading habit has definitely felt the benefits of this experiment :) I'm reading more books and am quite happy about that.
Writing summaries for YouTube videos helped me watch less videos in total, but also improved my filtering (intuitions or memory to help predict what videos are more or less worthwhile to watch) so I now watch less total videos of higher quality than I used to.
If you commit to writing summaries, let me know how that goes! I'm curious to see if the summary writing is as helpful for you as it has been for me (everyone's different so seeing if that intervention works for > n = 1 would be nice).
I can't find it now, but it says something to the effect of "researchers with closed doors are more productive now, but over the long term they lose the pulse of research and become increasingly irrelevant, whereas researchers with open doors are less productive but keep the pulse of research and stay relevant."
This is from Richard Hamming's You and Your Research. The relevant part:
Another trait, it took me a while to notice. I noticed the following facts about people who work with the door open or the door closed. I notice that if you have the door to your office closed, you get more work done today and tomorrow, and you are more productive than most. But 10 years later somehow you don't know quite know what problems are worth working on; all the hard work you do is sort of tangential in importance. He who works with the door open gets all kinds of interruptions, but he also occasionally gets clues as to what the world is and what might be important. Now I cannot prove the cause and effect sequence because you might say, "The closed door is symbolic of a closed mind.'' I don't know. But I can say there is a pretty good correlation between those who work with the doors open and those who ultimately do important things, although people who work with doors closed often work harder. Somehow they seem to work on slightly the wrong thing—not much, but enough that they miss fame.
Excellent, thank you! I've seen that selection quoted elsewhere before but am not sure I've read the full text of its source, it's good.
I like that RSS reader, once I get an RSS feed setup (any recommendations on FOSS ways to do this?) I'll subscribe using that and tweak the filters over time.
Something that might help with Hacker News is the "noprocrast" settings - you can configure it to only allow you to be on the site for a certain length of time and then not let you back on for a different length of time. If you configure a 15 minute "maxvisit" with a long "minaway" (600 minutes?), that might accomplish your goal. One problem with the feature is that it doesn't kick you off a page you're already on if you're scrolling through a long comment thread (and obviously won't help if you just open a bunch of tabs), but at least it forces you to stop on some behaviors.
Introduction
I committed internally and externally to following self-created rules for specific parts of my life to change habits and improve my production to consumption ratio. Here's what I did, why I did it, and what I learned after 5 weeks!
Reasoning
My use of time was bad, I had a very unbalanced production vs consumption ratio and spent the majority of my time passively consuming content or otherwise not doing much outside of work hours. Changing habits is hard, so I wanted help and made an external commitment to help with accountability and improve my likelihood of following the rules I created. The goal was and is to increase my deliberate use of time and productivity, with addon benefits of improving my mood, health, and general well-being.
External Help
I filled out lsusr's commitment form and submitted once per week progress reports, this was good accountability and helped me quite a bit with habit changing experiment.
Timespan
3 Months was too long, a few days much too short, so I settled on about 5 weeks, this experiment ran from: 27 December 2021 through 30 January 2022
The Rules, My Goals for Each Rule, and What Actually Happened + My Thoughts
Exceptions
Banned or limited activities are fine if done in-person with friends / family unless excessive; e.g. watching 2 episodes of TV or a movie in-person with others or going to a theater are all fine, but no binge watching. LAN parties and social gaming are fine for the most part, but gaming online even while on comms with friends for more than 3 hours is excessive.
YouTube
Goals
What Actually Happened
My Thoughts
Music
Goals
What Actually Happened
My Thoughts
TV & Movies
Goals
What Actually Happened
My Thoughts
Video Games
Goals
What Actually Happened
My Thoughts
Facebook
Goals
What Actually Happened
My Thoughts
Reddit
Goals
What Actually Happened
My Thoughts
News
Goals
What Actually Happened
My Thoughts
HackerNews
Goals
What Actually Happened
My Thoughts
Discord
Goals
What Actually Happened
My Thoughts
Closing Thoughts
This was such a helpful experiment! I gained valuable data and learned new things about myself and what impacts my health, happiness, productivity, etc. I've already written a new commitment and sent it in, with the adjustments I mentioned herein plus a few new things.
I like having such an experiment ongoing, and will likely continue doing so for quite some time. One rule I added is that I must post a retrospective after each commitment, because writing this was a great way to write a monthly review of my life (something I find helpful), review what worked well and what didn't work so well for me, and generally help me fine-tune my rules over time. Plus, anyone who wants to follow similar experiments may find value in mining my experience, which is nice.
Happy Experimenting!
Cheers,
Willa