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Friday, November 28, 2008 12:34:02

>Process/Product 062 - A Sisyphean Effort: Part I

Process/Product 062 - A Sisyphean Effort: Part I

Most people don’t know the myth of Sisyphus and have heard only of his punishment.

When Sisyphus heard that Esopus’s daughter was kidnapped by Jupiter, he offered to give Esopus this information, in exchange for a gift of water to his Citadel. He knew that withholding this information for a ransom would earn him grief in the underworld, but willingly traded punishment in the afterlife for earthly pleasures.

He managed to trick Thanatos, the god of death, to chain himself up, thus preventing any human from dying. When Thanatos was eventually released, his first victim was Sisyphus, but before dying, Sisyphus had told his wife to pitch his body into the town square. Once in the underworld, he pleaded to Persephone that he was not afforded proper burial rites, begging for a chance to correct this. Persephone kindly sent him back to the realm of the living.

It was not until he had reached a ripe old age that he was dragged back to the underworld and sentenced to serve his eternal penance.

According to some, Sisyphus was an evil, cunning, trickster and troublemaker. According to Camus, though, he was an absurdist hero, punished because he scorned the gods and cherished life. In his interpretation, Sisyphus is conscious of the futility of his eternal toil, and upon fully accepting it, actually appreciates it.

He imagines Sisyphus happy.


I had spent the entire day working furiously, but making no progress. Every time I put out one fire, newer, more interesting fires sprang up all around me.

It had been weeks since I saw the bottom of my inbox; the mountain on top seemingly pullulating. I knew it was possible to conquer the pile and get ahead, I had done it in the past, but I inevitably let myself slip.

It didn’t take much slippage before I found myself plummeting down the spiral of nega-productivity.

Alas, such is the curse of the eternally urgent. When constantly tasked with putting out fires instead of working on secondary goals or structural changes that make life easier in the long run, those things never get done, and I set myself up for more disasters down the line.

Even so, at the moment there were fires to put out, so I accepted my fate and zestfully charged forward.

Peace, K

>locate Process/Product 062 - A Sisyphean Effort: Part I
~/Process/Product 062 - A Sisyphean Effort: Part I


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Sunday, April 27, 2008 22:55:05

>Moleskine Cahier Hack: Sturdy Cover

Greetings interweb,

Those of you who know me know that I think paper is a great medium for note taking and list making.

Thus, I always carry a pen and my trusty Moleskine Cahier (say [kaa yáy]) notebook. I’m currently in the process of fully implementing my own version of the GTD system, which is by far the best organizational and productivity system I’ve read to date. For those of you who are already GTD’ing it up, this notebook acts solely as a “capture” bucket, nothing else. I try to process it every day, so that it doesn’t end up being a storage bucket. Notes go in and I deal with them the same day, so that if I ever lose the notebook I’ll never lose more than 1 day of data.

Cahier Hax 02

Cahier Hax 01

Out of all the notebooks I could have picked for my personal organizational system, I chose the Moleskine Cahier because:

  1. At 64 pages thick, it’s small enough to fit in my pocket (even in my fitted designer jeans)
  2. They come in packs of three, which is cheaper per page than the thicker (and more popular) Moleskine Pocket Notebook
  3. It’s still a Moleskine, with the craft and quality you’d expect. What good is an organizational system if you never use it? I can appreciate the workmanship that went into a quality notebook, and I actually enjoy opening mine up and writing on its pages.

Click Here to find out how to make this awesome notebook even better!


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