Hacking life in a sabbatical year
It’s Month #6 of my sabbatical year and my last article was written 3 months ago. Since then I’ve not only been waiting for Hari (??) but also practicing life hacking skills, so that I can write this article.
A note before we start: No, I haven’t forgotten about my original sabbatical objectives/priorities (German, crypto, DYI projects) neither the behavioral change associated with them (i.e. creating daily habits to keep myself true about my progress). Since we last spoke in March I’ve been:
Learning life hacking skills came on top of the above, since I promised I’d be writing about it in my Q2 sabbatical article. Well, one could say this is THE most important skill in life, it should have always been part of The Plan.
What is a life hack, by the way?
Oxford Languages defines “life hacking” as “a strategy or technique adopted in order to manage one's time and daily activities in a more efficient way”. Wikipedia extends it a bit and calls a life hack “any trick, shortcut, skill, or novelty method that increases productivity and efficiency, in all walks of life”.
For me, the term has a broader meaning. I “hack life” when I discover things (that most people already know, by the way) which make me pass through life in an easier and more comfortable way. I “hack life” when I live experiences that everyone in my respective age/social group live (or has lived already). In a way I associate “hacking life” with “living life like a normal human being”.
Hacking life is one of the things where I excel less. Would you not agree with me when you would read the profile of the following person:
?
领英推荐
What happened with my “hacking life” skills?
There is an interesting psychology theory that says humans tend to revert to the developmental cycles they missed (or did not fully complete) in the past. Another way of thinking about it is “what goes round, comes round”.
During my teenager times there was no TV cable in the village where I grew up. I would also get limited opportunities to spend afterschool time in the nearby city, as public transport to/from my village was limited. This means that, from an early stage, I got disconnected from the main sources of “living life like a normal human being” – the local TV and social events. In addition, my parents were of the (amazing!) opinion that one can learn “all-things-adults” well … when they become adults. So I was not asked to do too many chores, neither to learn how to cook ??. Later in life, when I went to study in the big capital and had my first jobs, I equally tended to make myself busy with anything else except the following: cooking, watching movies/TV, listening to music, attending social events, fixing stuff around me (new is better, so I thought).
So now you see where this is going, right? Two paragraphs ago we were talking about what happens when people miss / partially fill some of their developmental cycles: they tend to revert to the mean, like numbers or crypto charts ??. So I’m pleased to announce that, for maybe 2 years now, I’m in the process of “mean reversion”. This sabbatical, and the life hacking skills I’m working on, are part of it.
Life hacks, life hacks … we want life hacks!
Well, if you lived your life when you were supposed to, then you would not need to read further … cause you would know all of these life hacks (and many more) already. But if you, like me, got a little bumpy on the road to a well-rounded self-development, let’s have some fun together.
The proud list of Carmen’s top 3 life hacks – 2021 edition:
That’s it for now, dears. I’m going to eat some of those delicious oily aubergines from that vacuum sealed bawl, while I let you do other more important things in life.
PS: Next article theme = TBD. Next article date = TBD. I got feedback that I’m overdoing it with my sabbatical rigour, so I’m taking a summer vacation from it ??.