17 January 2024

Iā€™ve noticed that sometimes when I get stuck on something, itā€™s because Iā€™m trying to force thoughts to be complete.

When Iā€™m procrastinating, I can usually bring myself to start thinking about the thing, but then all the issues and complications get kicked up, it throws me off, and I donā€™t end up with any idea of what to do. The problem is I subconsciously donā€™t recognise the incomplete thoughtā€”the process of figuring out what to doā€”as valid, so I donā€™t hold onto it. Every time I think about it, I have to start again from scratch. Of course, you know it, I invariably do this over and over again, never properly finishing the thread and getting unstuck.

Iā€™ve found that the way out is, very simply, to have some trick to catch incomplete stuff. As paraphrased from the gtd podcast:

Dave E: But when Iā€™m processing my pile of stuff, what do I do with the stuff I donā€™t know where to put?
David A: Just have a pile for stuff you donā€™t know where to put.

Dave was stuck with the idea that uncertainty and incompleteness arenā€™t allowed. He was trying to do two things at once: organise his stuff according to what he thought of it, AND decide what he thought of it. Now, he can paradoxically step outside the problem. ā€œUncategorisedā€ is now a category.

Itā€™s so obvious itā€™s actually funny to be reminded of it. (Daveā€™s response was laughter.) I still have to remind myself all the time. Do I have a stuck task ā€œdo Xā€ on my to-do list? The task is now ā€œfigure out how to do X.ā€ Or ā€œdecide if I even want to do X.ā€ The output is just a note on my phone with my thoughts. Again, you step back and turn ā€œclarify the taskā€ into a task.

It can feel a bit like falling back onto an algorithm. The natural, intuitive approach to ā€œdo Xā€ isnā€™t working, so you say, ā€œwell, how do I do things? I guess maybe I research a few ways of doing it, write them down, decide on pros and cons, then pick one and try it. So I guess I just apply that general formula to ā€˜Xā€™.ā€ You just go a bit robot mode and treat it like any other placeholder objective. In return, you get way more comfortable pausing and picking up incomplete stuff, and less likely to get stuck.

I think this a thing on a very subconscious level too. I think this is part of what you do in breath-focusing meditation: youā€™re acknowledging all the incomplete, unresolved stuff in your mind, and youā€™re realising that, yep, Iā€™m still breathing; even though my mind is grasping to resolve everything before the next breath, I will make many more, and things will still be incomplete. Without keeping this in mind, sometimes I will be literally unaware of something until Iā€™m done with it. I wonā€™t pay any attention to the specific sounds Iā€™m making, or the silences, as I speak: Iā€™m focused on getting the words out. It sometimes feels like I start running a program and only get back control when itā€™s finished.