Monday 3 September 2018

Designing Your Life: How to Build a Well-Lived, Joyful Life by Bill Burnett and Dave Evans






A well-designed life is a life that is generative-- it is constantly creative, productive, changing, evolving, and there is always the possibility of surprise.  You get out of it more than you put in. 



Here's the big truth: there are many versions of you, and they are all "right".



Designers don't think their way forward.  Designers build their way forward.



A well-designed life is a marvelous portfolio of experiences, of adventures, of failures that taught you important lessons, of hardships that made you stronger and helped you know yourself better, and of achievements and satisfactions.



Our problems become our story, and we can all get stuck in our stories. 



If it's not actionable, it's not a problem.  It's a situation, a circumstance, a fact of life. 



If you become openminded enough to accept reality, you'll be freed to reframe an actionable problem and design a way to participate in the world or things that matter to you and might even work.



This is where all good designers begin.  This is the "You Are Here" or "Accept" phase of design thinking.  Acceptance.  That's why you start where you are.  Not where you wish you were.  Not where you hope you are.  Not where you think you should be. 



You can't know where you are going until you know where you are.



Once you design something, it changes the future that is possible.



Worry, analysis, and speculation are not our best discovery tools, and most of us have, at one time or another, gotten incredibly lost and confused using them.




If you discover and are able to articulate your philosophy of work (what it's for and why you do it), you will be less likely to let others design your life for you.




A coherent life is one lived in such a way that you can clearly connect the dots between three things: who you are, what you believe, what you are doing.




Logging when you are and aren't energized will help you pay attention to what you're doing and discover what's working. 



Flow is play for grown-ups.



Prototyping the life design way is all about asking good questions, outing our hidden biases and assumptions, iterating rapidly, and creating momentum for a path we'd like to try out.




Being happy means you choose happiness.



Options only actually create value in your life when they are chosen and realized. 



Imagined choices don't actually exist, because they're not actionable.



Failure is just the raw material of success.




Life is not about winning and losing.  It's about learning and playing the infinite game.




Living in reality means looking at and accepting where you are right now.  Life design is really about being able to answer the question "How's it going?"



Unlearning things is often harder and more important than learning things.