Stoic TODOs ----------- I've been having a really productive month. Lots of little successes and one big, sprawling one. I describe the highlights of the big one in this phlog post: [1] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space/0/~ratfactor/phlog/2020-02-23-my-setup Aside: I'm not a huge fan of having links at the bottom of phlog posts. Mainly because I'm usually curious about the link and I don't like to jump around a lot while I'm reading, it interrupts my flow. But I suppose an argument could be made that having links mid-stream is interruptive in its own way. Hmmm...what do you think? At any rate, on with the post! So February has been a good month and I'm giving a lot of the credit to my new system of project/goal tracking and the concept of having a monthly "theme". I'll probably write more about that soon. (I'll be performing a monthly wrap-up for myself in just three more days and I'm sure I'll be excited to tell about how it all turned out then.) Anyway, I wanted to jot out a quick post about one of the monthly goal/TODO lessons I've learned this month. (And, ha ha, okay, it's also an excuse to test the Gopher export/publishing script I just wrote today...) Stoicism ================================================================= Stoicism's popularity seems to have been on a rise for a while (I feel like I've been steadily hearing more references to Stoicism in the last 4-5 years). I find a lot of it to be both appealing and useful. I decided to take the plunge a couple weeks ago and now I'm currently reading a page-a-day from the book _The Daily Stoic_. I'm still new to it, but one of the principles of Stoicism that seems to crop up a lot is recognizing the things that are in our control and the things that are not. I find this relates to one of my biggest failings in creating good TODO lists. TODOs ================================================================= Pleasure: a list of TODOs with check marks through them all. Pain: a crumpled up incomplete TODO list in the trash. The List is seductive and dangerous. Sometimes writing a List feels intense like a forbidden delight in a Clive Barker novel: an exquisite torture of possibilities to succeed and fail. So, I've learned a *lot* of things about making good TODO lists this month, but I still managed to "fail" in a big way. I mean, I was really successful, but I don't feel like celebrating just yet because I've got this big chunk of goals that are not checked off. It burns at my soul in a very un-Stoic way. And it's been slowly dawning on me as I've gotten wiser over the last week or so that there is a common denominator across these TODO items: none of them are 100% in my control! Directly or indirectly, all of them depend on people and circumstances. I don't control people and circumstances. I control me. So, I'm frustrated and disappointed with myself for not getting these things done and...that's ridiculous. Ridiculous because: * It's keeping me from being satisfied with my hard work. * It's out of my control. * Feeling down about them does _nothing_ to change the situation. So I'm going to reach over right now to my notebook and put a big, heavy 'X' through everything that wasn't 100% in my control and... holy cow, that was all of the incomplete items. Whew, now I just need to let that sink in. :-) And in the future, I'm going to try to peg my success on stuff that I can actually control. Have a good one, underground dwellers!