A Very Important Idea

January 29, 2008 on 12:00 am | In Learning, Mental Models | 2 Comments

A very important idea/mental model in life is the idea of production and production capacity. I first got this idea from Stephen Covey’s audiobook of 7 Habits of Highly Effective People. He used the story of the goose that laid the golden eggs (the production capacity) and the golden eggs it laid (the production), but I’ll simplify it using another common adage:

Give a man a fish and he eats for a day. Teach a man to fish and he eats for a lifetime.

The desired result/production is for the man to be fed. In the first case, he is fed but you have to do it. So you get the production/result that you want. In the second case, the man learns to fish for himself, and you have improved his production capacity/result-creating capacity.

More examples (because examples help you understand things):

  • Say you have a child and you want a clean child’s room. You could do it yourself, but then the production capacity would be unaffected. The key is to get the child to clean the room, and you could bug the child until it does it just so you’ll stop bugging it, and you produce the result you want, but the child will not voluntarily clean the room, except out of fear. You have to find some way to get the child to happily clean the room.
  • I want to keep track of my finances. I could do it manually by keeping track of my receipts and my cash-in-pocket and just do the whole thing on paper. Or, I could make a slight improvement to my production capacity and upgrade to using a digital financial software, like Quicken, and then it can do a lot of this stuff automatically. I try to pay for as many things by debit as I can and carry as little cash with me as possible so that Quicken can simply download my transactions from my bank and automatically figure out a lot of where my money is coming and going.
  • Steve Pavlina spends a lot of time working on the production capacity that produces money for him, which is his blog.
  • I’ve been making back-end changes to the way this blog is run so that its easier for me to write posts or what have you. So, I improve my production capacity to produce blogs faster and easier.
  • When you are involved in personal development, you are usually engaged in a process of improving production capacity, unless you make growth the goal itself (as Steve Pavlina‘s done).

Main Point:

  • Give a man a fish and he eats for a day. Teach a man to fish and he eats for a lifetime. When the desired production is for the man to be fed, you can gain the same production by giving him a fish every day, or by improving his ability to feed himself, which improves the production capacity.

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I Have The Knack

January 28, 2008 on 12:00 am | In Uncategorized | 1 Comment


I have the Knack. Always had.

I opened up our VCR when I was about 8-10 and correctly diagnosed a dirty head. I’m a whiz with computers and technology of most kinds. More recently, I made an audio mixer work having never used one before. I’ve fixed pocket pc’s, again, without having used them before.

As far as I can tell, I do it using two things:

  1. I have a very good ability to abstract space in my head. I imagine the inner workings of whatever I’m currently working with.
  2. I remember a few principles, such as that someone made this thing for being used a certain way. I remember the function of the overall item, then try to figure out the functions of the sub-parts. I also piece together a lot of stuff from things I’ve overheard. For example, we’d had to have the VCR’s head fixed earlier, too, so I remembered that.
  3. I just play with it, and quickly learn the core ideas. This is how i’ve been able to learn complex computer programs like Photoshop, CorelDRAW and others without really having ever used them or any other sort of graphic design programs before. Ze Frank also weighs in on this issue, here.

Notice how awesome I am. That’s right. :-p

Seriously, though, I like to feel proud of myself, every once in a while. There’s a fine line between being genuinely proud of yourself and being arrogant, and I think too many people assume there is no line.

Note: I like comments. They tell me someone’s out there.

I really like comments, so please take a few seconds to leave one. If you enjoyed this post, make sure you subscribe to my RSS feed!

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