I do enjoy a good run, but I feel like walking gets a bad rap. Running will help you feel great, walking will help you think straight. That's what I say, anyway.<p>Will Self did an Authors@Google session where he talks about what I found to be a in incredibly liberating and enlightening idea. He recommends breaking the matrix of your daily to-and-from work/school/whatever commute by literally walking all over the parts of town you'd normally drive right past on your way to work. Under the bridges, over hills, through the parks, etc. You end up developing a much broader visual reference of the places you mindlessly go through on a daily basis, but more importantly, I think, you develop a deeper sense of place.<p>Anybody with an hour to kill should check out the talk he gives, as he can do it justice better than I can:<p><a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVEgOiB7Bo8" rel="nofollow">http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zVEgOiB7Bo8</a>
The straight razor advice is the funniest byte of lifehacking I've read for years... of course, knowing how "handy" I am with things (managed to get a friend bleeding from his eye by misusing an umbrella...), I'd say pass to it, however "zen" it may sound :)
Good tips, for those who don't have kids! Good inspiration for me to write a blog post about the same subject while having 2 munchkins running around for 12 hours a day.
This is a good thought piece. These are all things that require cognitive energy by don't overlap with "work", in that they are tangible, analog, and habituated differently. That being said, these things won't "slow you down" unless <i>you make time for them</i> first. That's the point he's trying to make, but its worth repeating. It's like spending "more", but on a higher quality of X (time, not money). You have to spend less somewhere else, though, to keep the budget in check.