The Motivation Hacker

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The Motivation Hacker

"This is your field guide to getting yourself to want to do everything you always wanted to want to do"--Page [4] of cover.
Summary of Nick Winter's The Motivation Hacker

Author: Everest Media,
language: en
Publisher: Everest Media LLC
Release Date: 2022-03-31T22:59:00Z
Please note: This is a companion version & not the original book. Sample Book Insights: #1 The Motivation Hacker shows you how to summon extreme amounts of motivation to accomplish anything you can think of. From precommitment to rejection therapy, this is your field guide to getting yourself to want to do everything you always wanted to want to do. #2 I had planned to finish my startup’s iPhone app before moving to California. I had no plan for how to build new habits, but I knew motivation. I would max out my motivation with every trick I knew, and set a time limit of three months to complete them all. #3 I came up with eighteen goals. Some I picked for terror, like the marathon and skydiving. Others I picked for excitement, like skateboarding and knife throwing, or because they’d be useful and fun, like learning 3,000 new Chinese words and reading twenty books. #4 A chef has a wide range of tools at his disposal. Just like a chef, a motivation hacker has a core set of tools that he uses every day. These include success spirals, precommitment, and burnt ships.
Hacking Life

In an effort to keep up with a world of too much, life hackers sometimes risk going too far. Life hackers track and analyze the food they eat, the hours they sleep, the money they spend, and how they're feeling on any given day. They share tips on the most efficient ways to tie shoelaces and load the dishwasher; they employ a tomato-shaped kitchen timer as a time-management tool.They see everything as a system composed of parts that can be decomposed and recomposed, with algorithmic rules that can be understood, optimized, and subverted. In Hacking Life, Joseph Reagle examines these attempts to systematize living and finds that they are the latest in a long series of self-improvement methods. Life hacking, he writes, is self-help for the digital age's creative class. Reagle chronicles the history of life hacking, from Benjamin Franklin's Poor Richard's Almanack through Stephen Covey's 7 Habits of Highly Effective People and Timothy Ferriss's The 4-Hour Workweek. He describes personal outsourcing, polyphasic sleep, the quantified self movement, and hacks for pickup artists. Life hacks can be useful, useless, and sometimes harmful (for example, if you treat others as cogs in your machine). Life hacks have strengths and weaknesses, which are sometimes like two sides of a coin: being efficient is not the same thing as being effective; being precious about minimalism does not mean you are living life unfettered; and compulsively checking your vital signs is its own sort of illness. With Hacking Life, Reagle sheds light on a question even non-hackers ponder: what does it mean to live a good life in the new millennium?