Articles

Finding Meaning in Every Day of the Week

Every day of the week has something to offer — even the ones we rush through or dread. From Monday’s fresh start to Sunday’s quiet reflection, each day holds its own kind of opportunity if we take a moment to notice it.

The Case for Bit by Bit Productivity

Steady beats speedy. I’m leaning into bit-by-bit productivity—the kind of patient, repeatable work that compounds over time. It’s not flashy, but it lasts. In this post (and the video), I dig into why process is product—and how slow, consistent progress quietly wins.

When Slow Feels Wrong

Slowness isn’t the opposite of productivity—it’s the antidote to hollow progress. In this short reflection, I unpack how Cal Newport’s Slow Productivity can be misread, why pace matters more than speed, and how patience might be the most underrated skill in meaningful work.

The Sound Between Moments

Time doesn’t just pass — it plays. Between each second and each song lies a rhythm we rarely hear. This piece listens to the space where time hums quietly, reminding us that attention, not activity, makes a moment last.

3 Popular Productivity Beliefs I Don’t Buy Into

After years immersed in productivity, I’ve learned that some of its most popular beliefs—about mornings, Inbox Zero, and work-life balance—don’t stand up to real experience. Here’s why I don’t buy into them.

Making Peace with Time

We can’t manage time—it moves with or without us. But we can make peace with it by managing what’s actually within reach: our process, energy, attention, cadence, and expectations.

The Half-Life of Care

Not everything you care about deserves equal weight. This reflection explores how to spend care on what endures—before your energy fades away.

The "like" icon scattered in various angles, overwhelming the image and them ind.

Curation, Not Cremation: Rethinking Social Platforms

Social platforms aren’t inherently dark and awful—they’re amplifiers. They can connect and create just as easily as they can divide and destroy. The challenge isn’t to abandon them outright, but to engage with discernment. In Curation, Not Cremation, I explore how the Spheres of Attention can help us reclaim our relationship with connection, news, and platforms—so our attention serves us, not the other way around.