Tynan

Life Outside the Box

Tynan hasn't filled out their bio yet. Creator of SETT. Adventurer.
Tynan
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What are your favorite Tynan.com posts?

I'm going to put together a book that's about half old blog posts (probably rewritten / polished) and half new material to connect the blog posts into a cohesive book. Could you tell me which of my posts had the biggest impact on you? A link or title or description (that one where you said...) is fine. 

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Corey hasn't filled out their bio yet. Wilderness and Web 2.0 explorer. Gamer of all stripes. EDM and adrenaline junkie. Traveller, dabbling writer.
Corey
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I've been slowly working my way backwards through your blog  and taking notes in a google doc for while now. I'm somewhere around late 2009, I think. From my notes, here are what pops to mind (I'm paraphrasing the titles from what I remember):

The Order In Which to Tackle Life. Advice for Young People. The Gear posts, of course. Five Rules to Make Friends with Famous People. Advice on how to Write Daily. The one recommending books you've read recently. The Vegas posts seem useful to know, although I'm no gambler.

I also really like the paragraphs these quotes are part of: "Confidence is tied with self ownership, both as a consequence and as a means...." "Our social skills are the window through which others see us....""Building these patterns is one of the best features of our brains..."

Nate hasn't filled out their bio yet.
Nate
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Tynan, I've got to say the one post that impacted me above all others is http://tynan.com/bethetwin

I'm not sure why it did, but for whatever reason, it was the biggest motivator that got me over the productivity hump in coding.

I.e. you know when you're tackling your first programming language and the simple stuff can throw you for a loop for hours? Like forgetting a semicolon and deciphering the error message, or hitting your first infinite loop and having the whole computer crash... But once you make it past a certain point you feel like you can actually build amazing things.

Something about visualizing that creepy guy in the picture, dressed up in a suit in the dog park stuck in my mind, and every time I'd momentarily try to quit in frustration, the absurd (re: unforgettable) visual images of that guy mingling with a CEO on the golf course or out taking dog sweater pictures would snap me back. After all, I didn't want that guy beating me to it or getting the supermodel girlfriend.

Now, thanks to me gutting it through and becoming an innovative programmer, I am living the entrepreneurial/daring/unique/self-employed lifestyle you very much espouse in all your writing, which if I recall correctly, is one of your main goals for this blog. If I hadn't sat down and gutted it out then, I likely never would have, as I was a student and it was the last chunk of time with which I had nothing scheduled (and thus could concentrate on a specific skill).

Speaking of which, I'm really interested in having a SETT blog now that I'm entrepreneuring full time; I know you mentioned something about signing up for a waiting list, but I couldn't find it. I'm holding off starting writing until it becomes available (I'm not in a rush, I just think SETT's release will coincide with me having enough stuff to write about regularly), so where can I sign up?

John Paton hasn't filled out their bio yet. I study operations research engineering and psychology at Cornell University.
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Off the top of my head, the two that come to mind are: 1) the one where you link to Sebastian Marshall's Japan story; 2) the one where you talk about police banging on your RV with you still inside. 

foote hasn't filled out their bio yet. schemer
foote
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I've found the last two to three month's worth of posts to be of high value. Favorite of that bunch would be http://tynan.com/extremes

'What Lasts' was a close 2nd.


Rich hasn't filled out their bio yet.
Rich
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This one: http://tynan.com/playpoker-2  and all of your RV posts.

Peter Park hasn't filled out their bio yet.
Peter Park
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I actually made a program months ago when you were still on Wordpress to scrape the posts and made it into an ebook that I could read on my Kindle. I read every post over a month. I could send you what I had if you want.

Corey hasn't filled out their bio yet. Wilderness and Web 2.0 explorer. Gamer of all stripes. EDM and adrenaline junkie. Traveller, dabbling writer.
Corey
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That sounds like a great thing to post in the Community section, if Tynan is okay with it. I'd sure be interested. Beats going through his entire blog backwards page by page, which is what I've been doing.

Tynan hasn't filled out their bio yet. Creator of SETT. Adventurer.
Tynan
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I'm going to be doing more editing for the one I'll put out myself, but definitely feel free to post this in the community section for others.

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2010 Survey Results

After a long day in the sun at the 2010 Crossfit Games in LA, I've flopped into my Aeron in the RV, which is parked near my old stomping grounds in Hollywood. I found an amazing parking spot right near the Farmer's Market that has no street cleaning and is always empty at night. You'd be surprised how important things like street cleaning become when you live in an RV. Anyway, I don't have enough energy left to pull myself out of my chair, so it's time to tally up the survey results from a couple weeks ago and share what I learned.

Life Nomadic

This one was totally unexpected. Around a third of the people who responded said that they want more Life Nomadic. To be totally honest, I didn't know people were that interested in it. The site, when it was separate, never developed the same sort of following this site has.

Planning Your day like Sebastian Marshall

I bought Sebastian Marshall's book, Ikigai, when it first came out. His is one of very few blogs that I read regularly, so I had high expectations for the book. And, hey... even if it's not great, I like supporting people I respect.

As soon as I bought the book, I read the first chapter. It was the blog post that I mentioned in the isolation post. Oh, I thought, I guess this book is just a bunch of blog posts that I've already read. I stopped reading.

That was six months ago. These days I read about 2-3 books per week, which means that I have a really tough time keeping my reading list full. Last week I was searching through my Kindle to see if I had any half-finished books I'd forgotten about, and I decided to give Sebastian's book another shot.

Man, am I glad I did. I'm not sure I've ever read a book with lessons that can be applied so quickly for such immediate results. Ikigai is one of the top few books I've read in 2012.

The focus of the book is rational and efficient productivity. Or at least that's what I got most out of it. If you're into that sort of thing, definitely read it. 

I bought Sebastian Marshall's book, Ikigai, when it first came out. His is one of very few blogs that I read regularly, so I had high expectations for the book. And, hey... even if it's not great, I like supporting people I respect. As soon as I bought the book, I read the first chapter. It was the blog post that I mentioned in the isolation post. Oh, I thought, I guess this book is just a bunch of blog posts that I've already read. I stopped reading. That was six months ago. These days I read about 2-3 books per week, which means that I have a really tough time keeping my reading list full. Last week I was searching through my Kindle to see if I had any half-finished books I'd forgotten about, and I decided to give Sebastian's book another shot. Man, am I glad I did. I'm not sure I've ever read a book with lessons that can be applied so quickly for such immediate results. Ikigai is one of the top few books I've read in 2012. The focus of the book is rational and efficient productivity. Or at least that's what I got most out of it. If you're into that sort of thing, definitely read it.  I now plan my day every morning. Sebastian shares his daily planning routine, which I used as a rough template for my own. Every morning I record the time I went to bed the night before, the time I woke up, the time I brushed my teeth, the time I finish planning, and the time I finished writing a blog post (I'm writing one every single day, but not posting them all).  Recording the time you finish these things is a bit of subtle genius from Sebastian. When you record the time you finish something, you tend to do it earlier. Today I woke up and had two immediate phone calls that had to be made, which pushed my whole schedule back. As soon as I saw the time, I started doing my few morning things, including writing this post. Morning used to be my least productive time of day, but now I jump right in and start producing. The rest of day planning consists of making a todo list for yourself. You're supposed to create a list that you believe can be completed to 70%, but I've completed 90-100% every day, despite trying to make the list harder each time. It's amazing how much you can get done when you have a plan and start early. I use the tasks feature of Google Calendar for my todo list. It's not amazing, but it's good enough and keeps me looking at my calendar, which makes me more likely to schedule things and see when they're happening. At the end of the day, I do a quick five minute summary, as prescribed by Sebastian. I record whether or not I flossed, reflected on the possibility of death, and played my violin. I write down my key accomplishments for the day, my top life goals, a quick analysis of the day, and my top priority for the following day. Last, I record how many minutes I wasted, how many minutes I worked on SETT, and how many minutes I spent writing. RescueTime helps me come up with a rough estimate of these things. There's a lot more than planning your day in Ikigai, but that was the big value that I got from it. He also spends a lot of time covering the same sort of strategy and philosophies that I'm a big fan of and write about here. ### The great Alaska trip starts next Saturday. A few friends and I will be riding our motorcycles to Alaska for no real reason at all.

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