13 KiB
Motivation
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Why do we do the things we do?
External motivation
Carrot and stick; someone else sets our path.
- activity feels meaningless
- makes it easier to procrastinate
- long-term: numbs our self-motivation
Internal motivation
We have our own target and we follow it.
- progress feels more rewarding
- brings good mood
- engages creativity and learning
Goal-based motivation
We want to achieve something in the future.
Two phases:
- long displeasure from not reaching the goal
- short rush of joy from reaching the goal
- that quickly evaporates
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Pros:
- it works!
Cons:
- it causes us damage,
it is not sustainable
Joy fades, requiring more demanding goals.
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Hedonic treadmill 🔗
Humans quickly return to a relatively stable level of happiness despite major positive or negative events.
The reward for finishing a major goal
is not worth a long struggle to get there.
Journey-based motivation
Joy is found in doing an activity, not finishing it.
- We enjoy the activity itself.
- "Happiness now", not just at the end.
- Unlocks a state of deep concentration known as flow.
- Practicing flow brings contentment and mastery,
- that in turn brings results.
Flow
State of deep immersion in an activity that...
- is challenging
- makes use of our strengths
- matches our skills
- is enjoyable.
We tend to lose our sense of time.
And it feels good.
Personal vision
How we'd like to spend our limited time.
- activities we'd like to be doing
- milestones we'd like to pass
- journey-based internal motivation
Meaning
When your actions have positive impact on others,
it gives them a deeper meaning.
- supporting the greater good feels rewarding
- helping others,
- being part of something bigger,
- creating a legacy
- it creates a strong and lasting motivation
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Group vision
Cooperation of individual visions.
- working together helps the group
- it also boosts one's own potential
The whole is greater than the sum of its parts.
TOOL: Personal Vision
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What is the direction of your journey?
What gets out of bed in the morning?
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How to build a Personal Vision?
- Personal SWOT analysis
- List your Achievements
- Analyze motivating activities
- Define a Beta-Vision
- Final Personal Vision
Step 1:
Personal SWOT
S
StrengthsW
WeaknessesO
OpportunitiesT
Threats-V-
Strengths
- skills, traits and qualities you have
- using them supports flow
- personal vision makes use of these as much as possible
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Weaknesses
- qualities you lack; limitations and negative traits
- using them retards flow
- personal vision avoids them if possible
These can be improved, but don't devote too much time to it.
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Opportunities
- possibilities today's world offers to you
- using them supports flow
- personal vision builds on them
Only a few will be used.
The rest needs to be rejected and banished:
- to gain focus, clarity and mastery,
- to avoid decision paralysis or regrets.
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Threats
- risks, possible negative impacts or scenarios
- take them into account
- recognize them and be prepared
- awareness helps with facing a potential fear
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My SWOT
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Strengths
- life-long programming experience
- perfectionist who loves creating nice and clean software
- persevering problem solver, especially with mysteries in tech
- open-minded and attentive listener
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Weaknesses
- introverted, social interactions are taxing
- cautious in opinions
I spent way too much time fighting my social skills.
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Opportunities
- switch jobs for...
- better fitting role (SW developer)
- higher pay
- different tech stack
- getting back to distributed systems
- contribute to an open source project
- build specific expertise on one topic
- get more exposure, share knowledge through talks and blog
- ...
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Threats
- changed role or job
- boring / stressful / annoying
- annoying co-workers / toxic workplace
- lower pay / long commute
- having to use Windows
- more exposure leading to personal attacks
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My Observations
- my SWOT felt misaligned with the current career (coding vs. people management)
- Threats already applied to the current situation
Change was apparently needed + low risk.
Step 2:
Personal Achievements
- things that brought you joy / you are proud of
- provides specific evidence of your strengths
- helps to gain confidence and think positively
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My Achievements
- finished college, wrote a cool master's thesis
- became a team leader
- self-hosting my services via VPS
- extracted ERP legacy tax functionality via a strategy pattern
- learned to type using the Workman layout
- ...
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My Observations
- Nice! I did some cool things!
- Very little of it was connected to people management
Step 3:
Analyzing motivating activities
Find out what drives you; strengthen your vision.
Categories of activities:
- bringing personal growth
- creating legacy
- building relationships
- with deeper meaning
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Growth : Legacy : Relationships : Meaning
An activity should ideally fit into multiple categories.
Goal: find groups of activities that support each other.
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My Activities
- writing readable code, testing, refactoring
- exploring new technologies and approaches
- contributing to open source projects
- learning through books and conferences
- knowledge sharing through blog, mentoring, talks
- working with colleagues - reviews, discussions
- research of innovative solutions
- solving problems, making software more useful ...
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My Activities Grouped
- collaborative software development (direct)
- exchange of experience (learning & teaching)
- research, experiments, investigation
Step 4:
Beta-Vision
Finding a personal vision takes effort and time.
Finding a beta version is easier
so you won't procrastinate to start!
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My Beta-Vision
- coding useful software on a daily basis, publicly
- learning from others and sharing my knowledge
Step 5:
Final Personal Vision
A few paragraphs of what you want to be doing.
---Act Now!
How can you incorporate your vision in the daily life?
Starting small is fine, as long as you start!
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My First Steps
- Coding refresher:
- Kotlin Koans
- Go by Example
- Learn Go with Tests
- Personal React project
- Fixing defects in the Android apps that I use (in Kotlin).
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My Findings
- starting small & early was great:
- for "prototyping" the vision
- to experiment stress-free
- to avoid overthinking it
- to figure out if I need to scale it out
- I regularly experienced flow, improved my mood, raised my skills and really enjoyed doing it.
- having a vision for your life is nice, but acting on it is essential