Parachuting into my own blog for the first time in (days? weeks?) —I see
Le Radical Galoisien is back!
Hurray!
Anyway, I've not been here because I'm
there, in
the basement of the brain, prowling the basal ganglia. The book's deadline has now been moved to September 1, thank heavens, but it's still going to be a race to the finish, or a
slog. A guillotine deadline, as an editor of mine once said, and not happily.
Making matters worse, in the closing moments of 2014 I made a commitment, as my sole resolution for 2015, to clear out my office. Not just my office, but my family room and living room, too, which had become holding areas for office spill-over.
I
am clearing out my office, as well as my family and living rooms. The latter two now have nary a file or folder insight. Success.
As of this morning I have scanned, filed, stored, and/or discarded 670 items. (Yes, I'm counting.)
The subset of those 670 items that has been scanned, filed, and/or stored has also been duly recorded on
Workflowy, giving me a fighting chance of locating any one of them again when I need it.
(M. said to me the other day: "You should write down where you put things." I said: "I do.")
As it turns out, writing a book about the basal ganglia
and decluttering 16 years of office accumulation at the same time was a crackpot idea, not to put too fine a point on it. Fortunately, because I'm writing a book about the basal ganglia (about the
frontostriatal circuit, actually) I now know
why writing a book about the basal ganglia and clearing out 16 years of office accumulation at the same time is insane:
[L]ots of multitasking requires decision-making: Do I answer this text message or ignore it? How do I respond to this? How do I file this email? Do I continue what I’m working on now or take a break? It turns out that decision-making is also very hard on your neural resources and that little decisions appear to take up as much energy as big ones. One of the first things we lose is impulse control. This rapidly spirals into a depleted state in which, after making lots of insignificant decisions, we can end up making truly bad decisions about something important. Why would anyone want to add to their daily weight of information processing by trying to multitask?
Why the Modern World is Bad for Your Brain by Daniel Levitin
Clearing away 670 items requires six hundred and seventy decisions, each one of them momentous as far as my brain is concerned.
I can't even begin to estimate how many separate decisions writing a book about the frontostriatal circuit requires. Every sentence in and of itself requires multiple decisions, since most of my sentences go through multiple revisions. That's just for starters.
Which brings me to the next issue:
In discussing information overload with Fortune 500 leaders, top scientists, writers, students, and small business owners, email comes up again and again as a problem. It’s not a philosophical objection to email itself, it’s the mind-numbing number of emails that come in. When the 10-year-old son of my neuroscience colleague Jeff Mogil (head of the Pain Genetics lab at McGill University) was asked what his father does for a living, he responded, “He answers emails.”
Several months ago (in the fall? the summer?) my Outlook calendar and email program blew up
again. This has been going forever, along with multiple crashes of my not-remotely-ancient iMac, entailing multiple trips to the Genius Bar and, finally, a long-distance relationship with kindly Brad, who lives and works on the Apple mothership.
Each repair of my iMac took another bite out of Outlook, and I am now at the point where I can't retrieve
anything from Outlook, not even addresses.
I can fix it, I'm sure, and I would if I had even one single synapse free to devote to the task.
But I don't.
Not one.
So: if you've sent me an email and I haven't answered, that's why. I'm now mired in indecision over whether to simply set up another gmail address and post it here on the blog, or post the gmail address I've been using for family and local friends and use that for everything,
or what.
I don't have any synapses to devote to that decision, either.
(While I'm on the subject of ancillary gmail addresses, should I set one up to sell the books I no longer want on Amazon? A tall-ish stack of books is sitting on the floor beside my desk, awaiting further action.)
I need more synapses.
OK, back to work
— miss you all and will try to be present more often
— !