I am so inundated with all these noisy messages coming in, and I can’t clear my head to write

Cornering

CORNERING@2x

The Context

The idea of painting yourself into a corner has traditionally been viewed as negative. Taking the idiom literally, imagine you applied paint everywhere in the room except where you were standing. That's a difficulty from which you can't extricate yourself. It leaves you no choice but to step on the freshly painted floor and damage it, or wait in that spot for six hours until it finally dries. But what if painting yourself into a corner was a positive thing? What if you learned how to create positive predicaments for yourself in which only having a few or no outcomes was a forcing function for the better?

The Tool

two color

Cornering

CORNERING — Creating positive predicaments for yourself in which only having a few or no outcomes was a forcing function for the better

Think about wifi on planes. It sounded like a cool perk when airlines first introduced it. But then again, does our over stressed, technologically addicted society really need more time to catch up on email? We have become far too occupied with responding. And the irony is, the thousands of messages and signals and pings and notifications demanding our attention every minute of the day, it's almost one hundred percent bullshit. It's all just noise. Quality hasn’t risen commensurate with volume. Eighty percent of the information we respond to is completely unnecessary. And that’s being generous. Sounds like the perfect opportunity to paint ourselves into an analog corner. Why not reject the wifi? Why not just sit there? Hell, nobody just sits anywhere anymore. Just imagine, without mobile service, there would be no longer anything to respond to. Only our own thoughts and feelings. That may sound scary for some, but frankly, all of us could spend a little more time listening to what our bodies are telling us, rather than responding to what the world is distracting us with.

Scott's Take

Scott's Take

My mind loves to go to this place in almost every area of life. Mostly out of simplicity, as the fewer options there are for me, the more normally my heart beats, and the better my life is. The most obvious example is wearing a nametag every day. People often ask me, wait, so, if you have that sticker on your shirt all the time, does that mean you have to be nice to everyone? Yes, that's the point. The nametag is a positive governor on my interpersonal behavior. It paints me into a friendlier corner. Now, does that mean my niceness is flawlessly executed in every social interaction? Of course not. I'm human. Sometimes it's seven in the morning and I'm feeling sick and in no mood to engage with people. Sometimes there is an unconscious man on the subway car who is stewing in a pile of his own feces, and that doesn't exactly inspire me to be nice to anybody. But overall, the corner my nametag paints me into is better for me and for others.

The Rest

Ultimately, if we want to achieve higher levels of personal accountability, ownership and responsibility, then it would be wise for each of us to find ways of painting ourselves into better corners. Sure beats standing in a puddle of paint yelling, hey, whose brush is this? Instead of damning yourself into no man’s land, use leverage to set yourself up for success. How could you create an internal locus of control and take yourself out of the victim position?

The Benefits

Lower your heart rate by reducing your number of options
Liberate your brain from noisy, notification related anxiety
Become more skilled at listening to what you body is trying to tell you
Create an internal locus of control and take yourself out of the victim position

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