Saturday, January 18, 2014

Due dates, motivation and a morbid curiosity

Nothing like a due date to motivate a student to get something done. I remember seeing an interesting  watch once that counted down the number of days that you had to live. I don't remember exactly the name of the product but the idea had stuck with me since.

I idly decided to checkout my life expectancy, because why should just the life insurance companies be the only ones to know when would you pass? After popping in my numbers the calculator came out says that I'd be around to 2060. From now till 2060 is another 46 years and the years at the end wouldn't be my best. There is a theoretical maximum fulfilment limit for each day that you live and my understanding is that maxima gradually wanes as time goes forward after hitting your personal plateau. From this point forward, everyday that you will have will be in effect the "best day that you will have," physically speaking of course.

Time is too easily taken for granted, like the adage "the sun will rise another day," we assume the near infinity of the universe where our time spans are much different. Why is it easy to take time for granted?

I read a financial article today "Why Elon Musk and Tesla Motors Inc. Stock Are Having a Great Week", it's not even worth linking to this article, but the idea that the stock price of a company trying to revolutionise transportation is some how relevant to the goals it is trying to achieve and even at the time span of a week? I doubt that the writers of articles like these understand the amount of work that can be achieved in a week to truly understand what it takes to execute no a plan as big as this.

I, myself had been privy to a project that I worked on for 4 years to make something new in the display industry. It hadn't become a commercial product by the time I decided to move on, but there are too few "great" things that can be accomplished in such a short period of time. People don't understand the about of preparation that goes on behind the scene before getting to any sort of visible stage. It's all been condensed in the success story like how the words "4 years"  can be said in under a second that represents a much different time span.

But this also leads people into a trap, the need to be thinking about doing something or forcing once self to do something to achieve some long term goal. I myself am not immune to this trap as I myself have caught myself to be thinking what could I be doing better, being bewildered at the time span at getting good at it and some how launching into some personal tirade to get myself to be more motivated to do things.

Motivation is unhealthy, like sugar is unhealthy-- it is sweet and it feels good but there is a crash when one is deprived of it. I will agree it is a great tool to encourage people to get things done and I have often used it as a tool when tutoring-- my students do great when I am providing them with incentives to do better, but it often stops when I am no longer teaching them. The most successful students that I have taught are the ones that are inherently curious and will dive deep into a subject as a matter of curiosity or habit and I would argue that true curiosity and habit are independent of one's motivational mood.

There is a wonderful book that I recall reading by Dan Airly called "Predictably Irrational" and for $8 is it a wonderful read with great insights on human success factors and how we find ourselves making the decisions that we make. I would sum that the decisions that we make are the result of either having no choice or when we derive pleasure out of it. Understanding these 2 factors will give immense understanding how many decisions are made.

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