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Well, there is no set boundary what belongs in the hierarchical notebook and the evergreen notes but I'm starting to lean in combining the two together with a flat hierarchy. Nonetheless, I was able to make more insights from separating them so it's worth it.
23 lines
1.6 KiB
Org Mode
23 lines
1.6 KiB
Org Mode
:PROPERTIES:
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:ID: 03cd9fad-e187-4939-9347-1a034c6efbe2
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:END:
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#+title: Overanalyzing slow you down
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#+date: "2021-07-15 07:26:52 +08:00"
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#+date_modified: "2021-07-15 22:42:39 +08:00"
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#+language: en
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# TODO: Correct examples, please?
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- thinking too much about a thing brings out all of the unnecessary details, making it harder to act upon something
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- this is where [[id:0e2c9eaf-f12a-47b2-9c9c-d1a590db131b][Involuntary attention switch is good for preventing tunnel vision]];
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furthermore, it mostly prevents [[id:9138397a-a965-45e9-97ea-71849e8d4f94][Overlearning]] as you choose more time into moving on to the action
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- it can be good to have too big of a list equating to more choices but for situations where we have to choose one (or a handful), this situation may rise
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- this is present in various fields: + on sports, competitors tend to focus on the right way of doing things from the tiniest of details such as the stroke of the arm, grips, and so forth;
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it often go into choking, costing their game
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+ on programming, this is present when initially thinking about the algorithm without implementing a prototype yet
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- to remedy against this: remember that [[id:df20e58b-6d38-4ace-8468-413bc708c772][Most of the work is done from smaller amount of effort]];
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additionally, you can [[id:01459b18-3f30-418e-bd8d-42661d5ea223][Start with wishful thinking]] instead of thinking about the process;
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this frees you from the details and think how would you directly solve the problem
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ideally, we would have the best course of action or the solution but usually, it is not realized nor tested against reality
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