just a little note
Tiny Experiments: How to Live Freely in a Goal-Obsessed World
Anne-Laure Le Cunff • 12 highlights
amazon.com
This is where you are going to outsmart others. Because the next thing about smart notes is that they are atomic. The size of your notes and the ideas on them matter. When other people are organizing their notes in one giant document, 2/ atomic smart notes whether digitally or in notebook, you do something different. You make your notes atomic. Thi
... See moreVicky Zhao [BEEAMP] • How to Take Smart Notes
You might have big creative ambitions with huge projects on the horizon, but to get there, you must start small. Make a tiny version of the big project and finish it. Do it again. And again. And again. You finish things. Make it a part of your identity.
Amie Mcnee • We Need Your Art
Notes simd mein Weg um „Finishung“ Teil meiner Identität werden zu lassen.
guess the reason for having the Post-it note Theory
where essentially what it is is having minimal effort what's the Baseline minimal effort that you can do to show up and start doing whatever it is that you're working on like a line drawing on a Post-It note is the beginning of your creative practice
Rhiannon James • Achieve Your Goal With Minimal Effort
Little concept I’m experimenting with! If you have any ideas let me know! Say hi to @yesconnieishere …again ahah!
instagram.comIm Hochformat zwei Notes übereinander
what if I told you that painting something this small could completely transform your creativity boost your mood and even rewire your brain
Leslie Stroz • 100 Tiny Paintings in a Year-- Are You In?
scientists have a completely different definition of success the way to define it is learning something new as long as you learn something new you haven't failed as long as you collect new data
you haven't failed and that really changes everything if you start applying this experimental mindset in your life and in your work
Anne-Laure Le Cunff - How to Design Tiny Experiments Like a Scientist @neuranne
When you collect lots of small data points, you create a “breadcrumb trail” and are more likely to notice overarching trends than if you were to focus only on the most salient experiences. Because of the time stamps, you’ll easily be able to remember where you were. There are no limitations as to what you can include in your field notes. Here are s
... See moreAnne-Laure Le Cunff • Tiny Experiments: How to Live Freely in a Goal-Obsessed World
By combining your pact with a metacognitive practice, you have now created your own life laboratory, equipped with everything you need to learn through deliberate action and reflection—an approach based on experimenting, assessing what worked, what didn’t, and what to change next.