Everybody’s Working on the Weekend

One of my best friends in the entire world recently followed his PhD advisor when she moved from sunny, warm Durham, NC to the vast frozen wasteland that is Madison, WI.  For various reasons he made this move in between the fall and “spring” (read: winter) semesters this year, which apparently was precisely the absolute worst possible time to move to the midwest.  Since then, he’s endured 2 polar vortices and a grand total of 1 day where the high was above zero… Kelvin.  It is literally impossibly cold there.
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“My tauntaun froze to death again! Now how will I get to lab?”

In any event, his girlfriend is in town this weekend (she still lives in a Durham and so is not frozen in place), and she told me that the cold had forced him to run on an indoor track.  This kid did an ironman in September, so you can imagine that when he goes for a run, he really runs — he’s not going out for a jog and coming back ten minutes later.  He’s running tens of miles at once, and now he’s doing it on an indoor track.  Or at least he was doing it on an indoor track, until running on an indoor track gave him a stress fracture.  Now he’s running in a pool, which actually is kind of interesting because it implies they still have liquid water up there.

I bring this story up because in all the time I’ve known him, he’s never been happy; we joked about the fact that this is probably the most miserable he’s ever been and he probably loves it.  I don’t mean he’s been depressed or suicidal or whatever, he’s just not a happy guy.  There’s always something he could be working toward, and as soon as he gets there there’s something else.  He graduated from college? Time for a PhD.  He ran a marathon? Time for Boston. He ran Boston? Time for an iron man.  It’s not so much that he’s unhappy, it’s just that he derives satisfaction from working hard and achieving his goals, and not so much from social engagements or the like.

In this regard, I’m actually kind of like him — not to the same degree (I ran a marathon once and decided never to do it again… then I ran another one and now I’m unable to do it again), but I derive satisfaction from hard work.  In my first few years at my current job, I probably put in 70 or so hours a week; it’s not a whole lot, but if you include an hour+ a day of commute, 4+ hours a week to work out, and 56 hours to sleep, it meant that I spent most of my waking hours at work, and it didn’t leave a whole lot of time for other stuff.  There were of course weeks where I worked less or more (probably one week a month I had to work 9-hour days on the weekends), but in general I spent a lot of my time working, and not a lot doing other stuff.

This was especially true in my second full year with the company, when I started coming in around 7:30 in the morning and generally left between 9:30 and 10:30 at night, and I spent the vast majority of the time in between productively.  I think my production at this time directly led to my being promoted, but at the same time it was made clear to me in my interactions with management that there was concern I would burn out (which, come to think of it, is a weird metaphor; presumably candles have a finite amount of energy they can give off, and it’s not like if you limit the size of the flame the candle can somehow last forever or that it will give off more light over the course of its life).

So, to avoid burning out, I decided in early 2013 to try out a couple of new things.  First, I started working from home two or three mornings a week; this allowed me to completely miss traffic (which would mean a net increase in time spent productively, absent other changes), but also to take additional time in the morning for things like making breakfast, which I used to eat hurriedly at my desk and now could be prepared and consumed leisurely. I also started going home at a reasonable hour; no formal policy of mine dictated this, but basically if I hadn’t started to tackle a problem by 7:00, I decided I wasn’t going to get around to it that day and pushed it into the next one.  Finally, I started to delegate more and do fewer things myself; theoretically this was best for both me and the company, because it freed me up to think about and solve other problems and developed the skills of the more junior members of the team, not to mention developing me for a possible managerial role in the future.

These changes, plus some others I’m probably forgetting, basically netted me an additional 10-15 hours per week of personal time on average, and I should say that there was little to no pushback from my management about it; basically, I don’t know if anyone even noticed.  Over the year since I made these changes, I probably ate dinner in the office 5 or 10 times, compared to at least 100 the year prior.  I was able to come home and relax for a bit before going to bed; I could go out for dinner with friends; I developed a taste for scotch I never thought that I’d have, and I began infusing my own liquor — I got a hobby!  My work was less stressful, in part because it wasn’t all my work anymore, and I had more time to pursue extracurriculars that engaged me.  All-in-all, a huge success.

Except that what actually happened was I got home and watched TV or played video games.  I had more time, but nothing productive to do with it.  (Guess what doesn’t take a whole lot of labor?  Leaving stuff in alcohol for a month.)  I saw my throughput decrease by a factor of 2 — not only was I working less, but the time I spent working was less productive, since I was meeting with people about having them produce instead of producing myself.  Where I used to have a few productive hours in the morning before everyone else came to work and a few productive hours at night after they left, I now had an hour and a half to get stuff done, which I generally spent making eggs and having a leisurely breakfast.  What should have been a huge decrease in stress and a huge increase in happiness ended up with me getting stress-induced shingles (that’s a story for another day) and having what might be the least satisfactory year of my life; this is one of the reasons I’ve resolved to fill my time more productively this year.

I think what worries me the most isn’t that I’m unproductive or that I don’t have fulfilling hobbies.  It’s the fear that I’m slipping — that someday I’ll be called upon to work hard, put in the time, and produce on the level I know I’m capable of… but I just won’t be capable anymore.  I think that productivity is a muscle that needs to be exercised in order to stay strong, and I was just sitting there atrophying.    This morning I had to log in and do about an hour of work, and I was shocked at how many other people were online working, because I haven’t done had to in so long; worse, it peeved me so much to have to do it I wrote a blog post about it.

It’s funny, because one of the ways I’m trying to combat my atrophy is to fill my free time productively; learning guitar, writing this blog, etc.  But this almost makes it worse — I logged on this morning, and I resented it, because it’s Saturday, and Saturday is the day that I get to wake up and write my blog post.  It seems that filling my time with stuff I actually enjoy doing has sort of made me realize the stuff I don’t enjoy doing.

This morning, I looked around me and realized that everybody’s working on the weekend, and I just don’t want to do it anymore.

The Joke’s on You

Hey team,

Back again, this time with something a little new.  Below is a slightly-touched-up version of a story I wrote in college for funzies that was a riff on the Fluffy Dog Joke (which, if you haven’t heard it, I link to after the story).  It’s replete with dumb jokes that only I find funny, so I think its value is more as a window into my soul than as an entertaining story.  

Now, I know a lot of you are thinking, “posting something you wrote in college shouldn’t count for your resolution this week!” but not to worry — I’m spending the rest of the day writing another DD story, which I should have ready to post in the next few weeks.

Without further ado, please enjoy…

Dirk Danger

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The Joke’s on You

 

It was eleven o’clock on a Saturday morning in late March, the kind of Saturday morning that comes in like a lion, but, luckily, you can sleep in and by eleven all that’s left of the lion are a few puffy white clouds against a pure blue sky.  Dirk Danger groggily rolled over to check the clock.  He could only go back to sleep so many times, and eventually he would have to overcome his personal inertia and get out of bed.  Wiping the sleep from his eyes and running a hand through his unkempt hair, he decided it was time.  After all, he had a big day ahead of him.  Today, Dirk Danger would make a new friend.  

His feet touched the cold hardwood floor, and he hesitated.  But hesitation was not Dirk’s strong suit, and he had soon finished his morning routine and was sitting down to a brunch of black coffee, bacon, and soft, not-too-toasted toast, covered with butter and jam.  He needed a good, strong foundation for his day, for today was a day of important decisions and unbounded potential, like all days in which Dirk Danger took part.  Finishing his meal, he placed the dishes in the dishwasher and breathed in the heady air of anticipation.  It was time.  

Dirk grabbed his keys off of the rack by the door and walked outside, locking the door behind him.  He crossed his springy green lawn and made his way to the driveway.  Climbing into his car, he wondered how his life might change after this journey.  He supposed it would be less lonely.  Not that it was lonely now, but sometimes a little… companionship could be nice.  He stuck the key in the ignition and turned, listening to the motor turn over and spring to life.  Without a second thought, he backed the car out of the driveway and proceeded south down North Street.  

He got stuck in traffic on the interstate, which was perhaps a little odd for a Saturday afternoon.  But they were always doing construction on Saturdays, and the radio  informed him there had been a minor accident that had been unable to remove itself from the road due to the construction (AM 1170 has traffic on the 1s and 6s).  He cleared the fender-bender and sped on to his exit, heading out of town and farther into the suburbs.

At half past noon he spotted the run-down sign that said “Animal Shelter.”  It was one of those signs that probably had all of its vowels burned out, so that at night it read “ n m l Sh lt r,” although he doubted it was ever turned on after dark, since the shelter closed at 5 o’clock.  It was, after all, a non-profit organization, and they had to keep from profiting somehow.  He pulled into the parking lot, and, as men are wont to due in such places and times, parked his car.  

An animal shelter is one of those places that is at once heartwarming and heartrending.  The shelter usually consists of one public room, which is inevitably painted a bizarre shade of off-white specifically designed to bring out animal-related stains.  It’s never a complicated shape — typically a rectangle, as in this case — and the walls are lined with cages, stacked floor-to-ceiling, each containing a single cat or dog (or a few kittens or puppies).  There’s always one weird animal in a cage that the staff shrugs about, as if to say, “Hey, what would you do if someone brought in an alligator?”  This is the room that makes children squeal with delight and parents wonder when their children will be old enough to understand what’s really happening.

That’s the public room, but the filled cages, the mysterious door labeled “Employees Only,” and the sounds coming from behind it belie a darker, grittier place — the Christopher Nolan version to the Tim Burton front room.  Behind the shelter is a small fenced area where, in theory, animals could go outside for some fresh air, but they never do.  The paid staff, emerging from behind the mysterious door, is composed of people who can’t stand animals because they are forced to clean up after them in their tiny cages every day, while the volunteers are just a little too into the creatures.  And although the place is called a shelter, no one is confused as to the stipulations attached to the title.  Sure it’s a shelter, but only for a limited time.  The lease agreement states that you have two weeks to get yourself into a home, and after that your time is up.  The whole concept of the shelter is just brimming with hope, but it’s largely a false hope and, don’t kid yourself, you know it when you walk in.  

Dirk Danger was thinking, if not exactly these thoughts, then riffs on the theme, but probably less bitter, for today he could be a source of real hope, and he knew it.  

He was greeted by a young, rather all-too-cheery looking brunette, who introduced herself as Jane.  Dirk could tell by her all-to-cheeriness that she was a volunteer, which was confirmed as she explained that she was in college down the road, but volunteered here on the weekends because she missed her dog Muffins back home so much, and they don’t let you have dogs on campus, but if they did let you have dogs on campus she wasn’t sure her parents would part with Muffins, but maybe she could get another Muffins, Muffins II (or maybe she could come up with a better name, haha), after all there sure were a lot of sweeties here that could use a good home, and, well, if she could be of any help he should just let her know.  She knew he could make one of these poor creatures’ day, and maybe some poor creature could make his day too, she was just sure of it.  

At this point, since there were no quotation marks yet in the story, Dirk answered, “Well, actually Jane, I was hoping you could show me what you might have in, say, the dog section?”  

“Oh certainly!” exclaimed Jane.  Dirk got the feeling she exclaimed a lot.  “We have just the cutest little guys right over here!  What were you looking for exactly?”  She led him to a wall with cages that were, you had to notice, too small for animals of any size, much less the animals contained within — pups and pooches of all types; Rovers and Rexes sat next to Mollies and Maxes, separated by thin walls of plastic or cross-hatched metal.  

Dirk examined the potential playmates.  “Well Jane, I was looking for something in a Beagle, really,” he offered.  

“Oh!  Well, let’s see, we usually keep the middle-sized dogs over on the end here, in these cages,” she explained exclamatorily.  (Excplaimned?)  Dirk noted that the cages were actually the same size; they just looked different because they were black, while the smaller dogs were housed in beige cages and the larger ones in green.  “Oh, dear!” she said.  “It seems we don’t have any beagles here today, mister…” She rose slightly on at the end, and Dirk became embarrassedly aware that he had failed to introduce himself amidst her exclamations.

“Danger.  Call me Dirk.  That’s okay Jane,” he added, noting her genuine disappointment at having let him down.  Then a rather peculiar dog caught his eye.  “How about that little guy there?” 

The dog was, in a word, fluffy.  It had shock white hair that accounted for at least two thirds of its apparent volume, hair that was actually sticking out of four of the six sides of the cage.  Yet when Jane removed the dog from its crate, Dirk was surprised to feel that it was a good-sized dog, not one of those toy Pekinese fluffy nonsense dogs, for which he had no truck. Nor was it a monster sheep dog or a St. Bernard.  It was roughly the proportion of, well, a Beagle, it was just covered in fluffy white hair.  It looked deep into Dirk’s eyes with an expression of unbounded hope and peered into his soul, practically begging “Adopt me!  Feel how fluffy I am!  Rub me right behind my ears, I’ll wag my tail and twitch my leg in appreciation!  It’ll be great!  Have I mentioned that I’m fluffy?” 

Not even Dirk Danger could resist.  “Aw, little fella, what’s your name?” he asked.  

“Well, he doesn’t have a name, but here at the shelter we call him–” Dirk cut her off with a wave of his hand.

“Let me guess,” he finished for her: “Fluffy.”  

“Exactly!  How did you ever know?” she asked incredulously.  

“Just a hunch.”  Dirk scratched Fluffy behind his ears, and Fluffy’s tail wagged and his leg twitched appreciatively.  That sealed the deal.  “Well, I’m not a man to call a dog ‘Fluffy,’ but I think I’ll have to go with it on this one.  Ma’am, I do believe I’m going to take Fluffy home with me today.”  Dirk found himself being down-homier than usual.

“Oh swell!” she exclaimed, as though this had all happened at a diner in the ’50s.  Maybe it was something in the hopefulness of this fluffy dog that brought it out in both of them.  “That’s so great!  He’s been here since the Monday before last, so we were really hoping he’d be taken soon!” The darker side of the animal shelter world creeped into her expression for a moment, then the fluffy hopefulness took back over.  “He’ll make a great friend, I know he will!  Look at him wagging his little tail.  It just makes me miss my Muffins back home so much!”  The girl was so full of exclamation points they were flinging themselves out through her mouth, Dirk remarked to himself.

“Well, Jane,” Dirk said, “it’s just a few short weeks until you see your Muffins again all summer long.  And until then, you have these friends to keep you company.  And I have Fluffy.  And for that, I thank you.”  

They chatted for a few more minutes while Dirk filled out the necessary paperwork.  Then he loaded Fluffy into his car, and the pair drove off to begin their life together.  

 —

A few weeks later, Fluffy was settling into the Danger household.  As it happened, all of those most difficult aspects of dog raising had already been taken care of by Fluffy’s previous caretaker.  He was house-trained, and in fact well trained in general; he could sit, stay, lie down, roll over, and shake hands.  All Dirk had to do was feed him and walk him, and it is on one of these walks that we rejoin our tale.  

Dirk was walking with Fluffy at a brisk pace on a Sunday afternoon.  It was one of those late April days that starts off nice and lulls you into a sense of complacency, then turns up the heat and leaves you parched and wearing too many clothes.  They rounded the corner of North Street, and paused near a telephone pole for Fluffy to take care of his business.  Dirk wiped the sweat from his brow and averted his gaze, thinking to himself that if he was hot, at least he didn’t have a ridiculous and permanent fluffy coat.  He’d leave Fluffy a couple of ice cubes in his water dish when they got back.  

Dirk felt the tug on the leash that meant Fluffy was done and started to head back to his house, but something caught his eye.  He noticed a peculiar sign on the very telephone pole Fluffy had recently, er, used.  It advertised the “ANNUAL FLUFFY DOG COMPETITION!  CASH PRIZES!” the very next Saturday.  Why not? thought Dirk.  He made a mental note to visit the website listed at the bottom of the flier.  

Arriving at the house, Dirk wiped his shoes extra carefully before entering, then prepared a dish of cold water for Fluffy, who lapped it up graciously.  Dirk pulled out his computer and signed Fluffy up for the competition, only a fifteen-minute drive away.  

“Who’s a good boy?  Who’s the fluffiest dog in the city?” he asked with a babying lilt, while scratching the appreciative Fluffy behind the ears.  “Who’s gonna win this competition?”

 —

Predictably, the competition rolled around the next week.  As they drove over, Dirk figured he really didn’t have all that much at stake in a fluffy dog competition, and he certainly wasn’t about to go out and hire a trainer or a groomer or anything.  This was a fluffy dog competition, nothing more — just some innocent fun with a chance for a little bit of the CASH PRIZES and a chance to bond with dog that happened to be unbelievably fluffy.  He pulled over to a street corner drug store to buy a brush, but that was all.  

They pulled up to the competition at half past ten; it was scheduled to start at eleven o’clock sharp.  The competition was held in a sort of outdoor meeting place, not quite a barn but not exactly a normal building.  The roof, if you could call it that, since it was actually just a series of crossbeams, was painted green and left the floor, if you could call it that, since it was actually just a pile of woodchips, completely uncovered.  Dirk walked in with Fluffy on a leash through a doorway, if you could call it that, since it was really just two posts and a crossbeam.  Inside, if you could call it that, since it wasn’t really a building, was a maze of cubicle-like stalls, about waist-high, each with a small wooden table, off of which dangled a number.  Dirk checked in and proceeded to his table, number 17.

Being a newcomer to the annual competition, Dirk hadn’t realized how seriously most people took it.  Dirk and Fluffy were easily the last pair to arrive at the competition; most other dogs had been there for well over an hour and were being given last minute groom-overs by anxious owners and impatient trainers.  Dirk had read the rules and knew there was no reason to hire a trainer.  The only criterion judged was fluffiness, and from the looks the other owners were giving him, he knew Fluffy had it in spades.  

When they arrived at stall 17 to await the commencement of the competition, Dirk idly brushed Fluffy up and made small talk with the nearby owners, who were friendly enough, even if somewhat miffed at this newcomer’s disrespect for the sanctity of the Fluffy Dog Competition.

“Dirk Danger, nice to meet you.”

“Hi Mr. Danger, I’m Holly!  Coming in a little late, I see.  What’s your dog’s name?  He sure is fluffy!”

“His name is Fluffy.”

“Oh my God!  So is hers!” Holly would say, pointing to her dog.  All of his conversations were the same, with women who were of a … certain age… and whose names were all Holly or Molly or Jolly.  This led Dirk to believe, perhaps correctly, that he should have named his dog anything other than Fluffy, if only for the sake of originality.  

Presently, the judge of the fluffy dog competition began working his way through the stalls housing the other fluffy dogs.  The Hollys and Mollys and Jollys whose dogs he was judging would put their best effort into looking presentable and might, if they were particularly confident in themselves, but not so much in their dogs, try to distract the judge from the matter at hand by donning looks that were anything but fluffy.  The judge would make brief comments along the lines of “well ma’am, that sure is a fluffy looking dog you have there,” write something on a clipboard, and move on to the next fur ball.

When he reached Dirk’s stall, the judge stopped, a look of utter disbelief on his face.   He looked back at the last dog, as if to check and see if his eyes were playing tricks on him and perhaps all dogs appeared twice as fluffy as they actually were, then back at Fluffy.  He poked and prodded Fluffy, pulled at some of his fluff to see if he was really that fluffy or if he was somehow cheating — evidently they had problems with people gluing cotton to their dogs.  

“Well, I say now,” began the judge, “I do declare that is the fluffiest gol’ durn dog I do believe I’ve ever seen!”  Dirk pondered whether the judge was putting on a ridiculous southern drawl simply because he had “judge” affixed to his name.  It seemed that no one who was actually from the south would put the word “do” before every verb, or else no one would ever finish saying anything.  He pulled Dirk close and said quietly, but excitedly, “I do have to judge the rest, y’see, but I’ll be a flappin’ Jack if this here dog don’t win the competition.” Then he circled something on his clipboard and hurried on to examine some more, less fluffy dogs.  

An hour after the judging commenced, an announcement was made that the award ceremony would begin. The contestants huddled into the center of the assembly area, away from the stalls in which they had been judged, in which stood a small clear space with a podium at one end.  The judge walked up to the podium and announced the third and second place dogs, which went to Holly and Molly.  There was much applause and general approval upon the sight of their two dogs, which were indeed quite fluffy.  

Then the judge paused and announced, drawling harder than ever before, “And the fuhst place, I do say the fuhst place dawg is the fluffiest flea-bitten lil’ mongrel eva to grace these fine halls, and hI’ve been a-doin’ this fo’ no less’n twenny-fow ye-uhs.  The winna, I say, the winna is Mister Dirk Dangea and his dawg Fluffa.”  He paused and added, drawl-less and to the side as Dirk approached the podium, “It is Fluffy, isn’t it Mr. Danger?” and nodded, as if to say, “It always is.”  

Dirk stepped forward to applause and disbelief from the crowd.  He could hear murmurs along the lines of “ooooooh look it’s sooooo fluffy,” and from somewhere in the back he heard the phrase “must be cheating.”  He couldn’t help but feel a tinge of pride.  

As he accepted his first place blue ribbon, the judge went on to the rest of the crowd, in his ridiculous drawl, “And it is with great honor, great honor I say, that I announce that Mr. Danger and Fluffy will be representing us at the State’s Fluffiest Dog Competition in one month’s time, I say four weeks from today.  With a dog like that one there, I see no reason why our fine city should not have the fluffiest dog in the entire state — the state, I say!”  

Dirk had been unaware of any State’s Fluffiest Dog Competition, but he was okay with going.  Fluffy seemed to be enjoying himself at any rate; Dirk couldn’t tell but he thought he could detect a newfound pride in the dog’s demeanor, and perhaps even a smile across the pooch’s face, though it was hidden behind a fair amount of fluff.  He decided to spend the CASH PRIZES, which it turned out were only $25, on a new fluffing brush to prepare for the next round.  

 —

The next few weeks passed by in a flash.  Business continued as usual during the weeks, but on the weekends Dirk paid extra attention to Fluffy, brushing him almost incessantly until his next competition.  And it came as no surprise to him that Fluffy won the competition in April, besting Hollys and Mollys and Jollys at the state level before advancing on to the United States Regional Fluffy Dog Competition and besting Hollys and Mollys and Jollys there.  Three weeks later he advanced to the United States National Fluffy Dog Competition, and won that on network television (broadcast at three in the morning, but re-broadcast at two AM the next night) with flying colors.  And then it was the World Northwest Quadrisphere Fluffy Dog Competition, and Fluffy won that too.  By September, Dirk’s weekends were solely devoted to Fluffy, who had become an increasing proportion, albeit still a small one, of his income. (The WNQFDC had a cash prize of a thousand dollars.)  He was preparing to enter the World’s Fluffiest Dog Competition in Paris. 

Dirk felt an incalculable pride in Fluffy.  The luck of finding him — officially the fluffiest dog in the northwestern quadrisphere! — plus the time invested in brushing him and traveling had built a sort of commitment – by – investment to the project.  And at this point, Fluffy had yet to see any real competition.  If Fluffy wasn’t the fluffiest dog in the entire world, then Dirk was prepared to see a dog that was actually made entirely of Egyptian cotton.  

When it finally came time, he stepped out of the plane in Paris with Fluffy in an extra soft cage, which Dirk had designed specially so as not to remove excess fluffiness from Fluffy’s coat during the long flight.  They had arrived an entire week early to ensure that Fluffy wouldn’t react poorly to the new atmosphere.  Frizziness would get points deducted from Fluffy.  The ten thousand Euro in prize money was good, but Dirk wasn’t about to let Fluffy or himself down by losing the competition, regardless of the prize.  He was playing for pride, now. 

Dirk continued to work as normal in Paris; after all, he had a case there.  But when the weekend rolled around, he was all business.  Fluffy business.  

The competition was held under the Eiffel Tower.  Not a tiny replica Eiffel Tower, or even a pretty big one, like in Vegas.  The real deal.  They only had an hour to get it over with since it was, let’s face it, a fluffy dog competition and the Eiffel Tower was a pretty important place.  But still, it was held under the most recognizable iron structure ever built.  And Fluffy seemed thrilled to be there.

As they walked underneath the arches, Dirk couldn’t help but remark on how the competition was stiffer than before.  Dirk expected there to be only 4 contestants, one from each of the World Quadrisphere Competitions, but local tie-ins and back-door deals brought the competition to over 50 dogs, most of them European. Still, Fluffy was clearly the fluffiest dog in the place.  His conversations, in whatever other languages he could understand, were all exactly as they had been before.  Some woman, now usually named “Fifi” instead of “Holly,” would invariably tell him that her dog was named “Fluffi” and that his dog was “extremement Fluffi aussi.”  

Dirk was getting a little bit nervous, and he didn’t like it.  He didn’t usually get nervous, and this seemed like a particularly ridiculous time for that to happen.  This was a competition to see whose dog was fluffier, not a fight to the death.  Only a few thousand dollars were on the line.  Still, Fluffy looked so confident, and Dirk had been feeding on that confidence.  He didn’t really know what would happen if that confidence disappeared or what would happen to Fluffy if he didn’t get the award.  That was unlikely, he told himself, Fluffy was by far the fluffiest dog here.  And if he was the fluffiest dog here, then he was certainly the fluffiest dog in the world.  Dirk Danger took a deep breath and reminded himself that he had the World’s Fluffiest Dog.  

As the judges began making their way around the base of the tower, Dirk’s nervousness eased.  The judges were moving quickly, yet taking painstaking care to judge each dog based on the criteria of fluffiness — volume, rebound, density, and fineness. Dirk watched calmly as dogs were checked three times each by three separate judges, who worked efficiently yet thoroughly.  They were rapidly approaching Fluffy.  

When the first judge arrived, Dirk put on his best smile.  And Fluffy did, if you could believe it, the same thing.  The judge gave Fluffy one look and called over the nearest of the other two judges — a huge breach in protocol, as the judges were required to give their marks completely independently.  Dirk smiled confidently as they began speaking rapidly in a language he didn’t understand.  He was used to this.  “This is the fluffiest dog in the world!” they were saying.

The first two judges motioned the third judge over.  He held up his hands in protest, then continued to examine his current subject.  The first two judges put on looks of exasperation.  Dirk knew they were thinking this contest was over.  Fluffy would win in a landslide.  

Finally, the third judge made his way over.  The three judges convened by Fluffy, casting glances in his direction and speaking rapidly and heatedly.  Dirk couldn’t help but notice how excited they seemed.  

Finally, the third judge addressed Dirk.

“Sir,” he began in a voice with a thick Eastern European accent.  “I am sorry to inform you that your dog?  He is just not that fluffy.”

The first two judges nodded and continued on their way.  Dirk put on a big smile, gave Fluffy a thumbs up, and walked him out of the competition.  Fluffy would never know; as far as he knew he was the Fluffiest Dog in the World.  But Dirk privately decided to change the dog’s name as soon as possible, and definitely give him a haircut.  

The End

HAHAHA I made you read that long story and there was no punchline! Joke’s on you!  As promised, here’s a link to the first rendition I could find of the Fluffy Dog Joke.  

Resolution Makes the World Go Round

Hey team!  Week two, and I’m still at it, ready to say more dumb things on the internet.  I’ll go ahead and apologize for this post — it’s going to be about a particularly boring topic: me.  I sort of started out this idea with the goal of not really writing a lot about myself, but then I realized that I’m pretty self-absorbed, and there really wasn’t anything I could do to stop myself.  Get prepared for a lot of “I” and “me” in this one.  EVERYONE LOOK AT ME I’M SO COOL.

Anyway, in last week’s post I mentioned that the whole reason I’m writing this blog (besides obviously to just talk about myself to no one in particular — hey, someone’s gotta spread the good word) was because I had made a New Year’s resolution to write something, anything, at least once a week.  But what I didn’t mention (or maybe I did? I don’t really know — I went back to my first post to check but man was that stuff boring) is that this isn’t my only resolution, nor is this the first year that I’ve had any.  In fact, over the past few years I’ve probably made upwards of 50 resolutions, with varying degrees of success.

One of the things that’s been driving me absolutely crazy over the last few weeks is the number of people or things that have come into my life telling me that, for one reason or another, New Year’s resolutions don’t work, or that they’re stupid, or that I’m stupid, and while other people can successfully resolve to change themselves in the new year, it is me, personally, who will fail.

I asked my officemate if she had any resolutions (we’ll get to why I asked in a minute), and she told me that resolutions are just “setting yourself up for failure.”  I asked her why and her response was basically “it’s ridiculous that you’d just set a date and then decide to start doing something on that date. You’re just going to slide back into old habits, and as soon as you fail, you’ve lost all motivation.”  I certainly see her point — it’s probably not that effective to sit down at work in late November after your 9th beer on a Tuesday afternoon and think “Man, I resolve to quit drinking.  In a month!” and then crack open your tenth beer.

But at the same time, nobody I’ve known has ever looked up one day and said “oh man I had no idea I needed to quit smoking but now that I do, no more cigs!”  Admittedly, the only habitual smoker I’ve known was my mom, but she had known she should quit since long before I was born, and she tried to quit frequently.  Her strategy was never “I’m just… quitting. Right now.”  When you quit, plans need to be laid; if you’re going to quit you probably need to know at least a few days in advance so you can nail down your strategy: cold turkey, patch, nicorette, decreasing volume, locked in a room for 3 weeks with only food and water and no sympathetic human contact.  You may need supplies (for instance, nicotine patches, or perhaps 3 weeks of food and water and a down payment on an apartment that locks from the outside).  There’s no difference between saying “I’m going to start tomorrow” and “I’m going to start January 1” (especially if it’s New Year’s Eve), it’s just a reasonable date to choose.

Quitting smoking or not, at the end of the day, isn’t there something to be said for looking at your life, deciding how you could make it better, and then picking a date to do it?  It’s not like it has to be January 1, it’s just that that’s a super convenient time to start — the whole point of the new year is that it’s new, and it hasn’t yet been tainted with your furry porn addiction.  In November 2013, it’s already obvious that 2013 can’t be the first year you didn’t look at furry porn (sidenote, how does that even work? Isn’t the whole point of furries that they’re in costumes? Maybe furry porn is just… regular furry pictures? And people are into that?), it can only be the year you stopped looking at furry porn, and that’s not nearly as exciting.  2014 is a clean slate — you can porn up them furries all the way through 2013-12-31 23:59:59 and still have a fresh start.

This post is now rated X

Also, apparently there are religious origins? (To New Years resolutions, not furry porn. That I know of.)

Now, as to the fact that people will slide back into old habits, I would posit that people can change.  I know for a fact they can, because my mother — the same one who attempted to quit smoking — hasn’t had a cigarette in 15 years.  Granted, she’s a pack-a-day cigar smoker now, but that’s just because cigars pair so well with her bottle-a-day scotch habit.  That said, there’s obviously some truth to the fact that people are going to backslide; various articles I’ve found have suggested a failure rate of anywhere from 54% through 6 months to 12% to 8%, which is obviously quite high.  And, to be honest, a 10% success rate probably seems about right — of the 50+ resolutions I’ve made, I’ve probably followed through on somewhere between 5 and 10 of them for a full year or more, and my mom probably tried to quit smoking 10 times before she finally kicked the habit.

OK, so admittedly a 90% failure rate is pretty high, and I guess it could be construed as setting yourself up for failure.  But at the same time, it’s a 10% success rate.  I would argue a 10% success rate is significantly higher than the 0% success rate of not resolving to make any change.  It’s a pretty touchy-feely argument, and so naturally I hate having to make it, but having a period of self-examination and identifying personal weakness is a valuable thing to do, even if your resolutions fail.  Wanting read a book every month is the first step toward reading more, and whether you actually read or not  you’re in a better place if you recognize you should.

Plus, there are ways to raise the success rate — many of which were mentioned in the articles I linked earlier.  Granted, I don’t agree with all of them, but there are certainly a number of commitment devices that can be employed to hold you to your resolutions.  (I specifically bring up the concept of commitment devices here just so I can bash the commitment device episode of the Freakonomics podcast, which failed to give any meaningful advice or draw any meaningful conclusion about what makes a good commitment device.)  Again, I have a lot of experience resolving — and a lot of experience failing — and I’ve gleaned a few tips from the resolutions I keep vs. the ones I don’t, some of which fly in the face of apparent conventional wisdom.

“Commitment devices, am I right?” – Stephen Dubner

Write Things Down

The first and most obvious one is to write the resolutions down.  Over the last two years, I’ve started writing mine down, as much to track my failure as to track my success (great tautology, me).  Really, though, it’s an insight into what I wanted to change about my life at any given time. Take, for example, my resolutions from 2012 — I was in my early-mid-twenties… or my late-early-twenties… or approaching my mid-mid-twenties… I’d turn 25 that year, which should provide some context (a mild quarter-life crisis, plus empirical confirmation of the extended adolescence epidemic) for the utter garbage I resolved to do that year:

  • “Work out 5x per week”
  • “Gain full range of motion in knee” — still haven’t gotten that back.
  • “F B’s, M M” — I don’t think I know what that means.  Let’s hope I succeeded
  • “Work harder, not smarter” — I … guess this seemed like a good idea at the time?
  • “Clone a dinosaur.  VELOCIRAPTOR!?” — This was more of a stretch goal; I would have settled for a brachiosaur or your run-of-the-mill parasaurolophus.
Not good enough. Take it back.

No, in all seriousness, I didn’t write anything down in 2012, and do you know what my success rate was that year? Neither do I! I didn’t write anything down. How are you not getting this?  The point of writing things down is not only to track progress, but to remember what it was you wanted to do in the first place.  I can say on January first that I’m going to eat scrambled eggs every day for breakfast because I need more cholesterol (or less cholesterol? What’s the official view on eggs these days?), but if I don’t remember why I started eating eggs for breakfast and I eat cereal one day in June, there goes my resolution.  The best solution here is to write them down in a place that’s highly visible — a post-it note on your desk, or the wallpaper of your computer.  Resolve to do it!

Publish Your Goals

This is another commonly-accepted commitment device. The idea is basically that if you tell people about your resolutions, you’re more likely to follow through on them, in part because you know that people will razz if you don’t.  Plus, this puts people into it with you — if you tell everyone you’re going to quit smoking, you’ve declared to the world that you don’t want to be a smoker, that smoking is essentially holding you hostage.  Next time your coworkers at  the Gulp-n-Blo see you outside the building next to the dumpsters on your smoke break, they’ll either shame you or provide encouragement — either one is more likely to get you to keep your commitment.

The other thing that tends to get overlooked here is a phenomenon I first encountered in Eric Greitens’s (Go Duke!) The Heart and the Fist: you’re much  more likely to let yourself down than to let others down. He talks about the fact that, in training to become a Navy SEAL, he felt like the enlisted men had it harder than he did — not because they had more responsibility, or their training was harder, or they weren’t getting the same meals as the officers were, but because they were worried about making it through training.  As an officer, Greitens, on the other hand, was worried about his men making it through training.  Rather than asking, “Why am I doing this?” or, “How can I make this end,” he was asking, “What can I do to get my men through this?” and, “Who needs the most encouragement right now?”  The hardest part of Hell Week for him was a single hour when he was alone and couldn’t fall asleep, specifically because it was the only time that he was worried about himself rather than others.  If you publish your goals and let everyone know what they are, you know you’ll be letting everyone who knows about them down rather than just yourself.  I think at its core it comes down to this: I already know I’m a useless schlub who’s good for nothing, but other people don’t.  I want to preserve that ignorance for as long as possible, and if I have to lie to them by being better than I actually am to do it, I will.

This begs the question of how, exactly, to broadcast your resolutions. Through years of experience, I’ve found that the best way to do this is not, in fact, to walk up to friends, acquaintances, or strangers on the street and declare, “This year I resolve to nail a hottie!”  For the most part, people don’t want to hear you talk about your resolutions — they didn’t ask, and they don’t care.  (Counterpoint: you’re still reading this.)  My back door into telling people about my resolutions is to ask them if they have any (hence asking my officemate).  Then, once they’ve told you that resolutions are for suckers and you’re setting yourself up for failure, at least you’re on the subject, so broadcast away!

However, since I can’t ask the readers, here are my 2013 (including some indication of success) and 2014 resolutions.  Mock me at will.

2013

  • Work out 5 Days / Week (Avg. 4.3)
  • 10% body fat by June (HAHAHAHAHAHA)
  • 1/2 marathon (SO CLOSE, but I was… “injured?”)
  • Play Work Sports (I played frisbee once)
  • Increase Flexibility (I went to a couple yoga classes)
  • Get a hobby (I started infusing my own beverages!)
  • Text 1 long distance friend per day (that lasted a week)
  • Take Dance lessons (Nope.)
  • Join / Form a Band
  • Survive (Hooray!)

2014

  • Work out 5 days / week
  • 10% body fat by EOY
  • Olympic Triathlon
  • Increase flexibility
  • 56 hours of sleep / week
  • Wake up earlier (target 630)
  • Go on 1 date / week
  • Text / Communicate w/ 1 long-distance friend per week
  • Take Dance lessons
  • Write / Blog (‘sup everyone) on a weekly basis
  • Join / Form a band
  • 2+ hours of music practice / week
  • 2 Coursera courses
  • Survive

If at First You Don’t Succeed

Notice anything about last year’s resolutions vs. this year’s?  They’re eerily similar.  Here’s another place where writing things down helps — at the end of 2013 I could look at my list and say “well, I didn’t do a lot of this stuff, but I still want to,” and I get to try again.  That may seem like failure, but remember that it took my mom 10 tries to quit smoking, but she finally did it.  Why? Because she kept trying.  She didn’t let the failure of one resolution affect her decision to make the same resolution twice.  The other thing is that I get to evaluate my goals from the previous year — do I really want to run a half marathon? Probably not — I don’t know that my knees can take it, and I don’t really get that much from it.  Instead, maybe I’ll try to swim and bike more to stay in shape; I bet doing a triathlon would give me a reason to do those things.  I guarantee you I won’t hit a 100% success rate this year, but if I keep rolling over my resolutions, on average I’ll hit all of them in the next 10 years.

Quantify Your Goals

I think this one is pretty mainstream too, but it’s essential to quantify your goals.  The resolution “eat less cake” isn’t particularly useful — how much cake did you used to eat? Can you consume cake at roughly twice that rate until June and eat no more cake thereafter and still pass?  Are you eating smaller slices, but at the same frequency? Diminishing frequency, but eating entire cakes?  How many loopholes are there where you could eat objectively more cake, but still succeed?  The goal should be none.  Rather than “eat less cake,” maybe “eat one or fewer slices of cake per month,” or better yet, “eat fewer than 100 grams of cake per month.”  The point is, you should know whether you’ve succeeded or not without having to make a judgment call.

Go Big or Go Home

Here’s where I differ from the conventional wisdom about resolutions.  A lot of authorities suggest taking baby steps or picking only one resolution (the 12% article linked above suggests both).  Hogwash, I say!  It’s harder to make sweeping changes in your life than to make small ones, but you’re more likely to slide back on small ones.  If you usually drink 45 drinks a week, sure it’s easier to drink only 40 than it is to give up drinking altogether.  But at the same time, you’re more likely to be 40 drinks in and forget that you made the resolution (this might be a bad example, because by nature of being 40 drinks into anything you have almost certainly forgotten all of your resolutions).  But the point, if you’ll stop interrupting me, is that smaller steps lead to fuzzier lines.  Plus, if you shoot for the moon and miss, at least you end up in the stars — would you rather come close to working out 5x per week and miss pretty big, and end up at 2.5, or try to work out once per week, just barely miss, and end up at .9 per week?

This also applies to the number — the article referenced above suggests picking exactly one resolution, which will keep it at the front of your mind and be easier to track.  Bollocks! If you have a 10% success rate and you want to make sure you succeed with something, you’re going to maximize your chances of success by having many resolutions.  In my experience, resolutions aren’t failed in bulk, they’re failed individually (Fore example, yesterday I forgot to text a friend, but I did get a workout in — we’ll get to this in a minute).  If you have 10 resolutions and a 90% failure rate, congratulations, one of your resolutions was successful! That’s better than the people who had one resolution and a 90% success rate.

Keep it Realistic

Obviously, you’ll never succeed if you pick something that’s wildly impossible — while I said “go big or go home” before, that has its limitations.  You’re never going to clone a dinosaur, don’t be ridiculous.  Unless your job actually is to clone a dinosaur, in which case WHY ARE YOU READING THIS EVERY SECOND YOU WASTE READING THIS IS A SECOND I DON’T GET TO RIDE A DINOSAUR.

Coming to a store near you in 2015

Failure is Nothing

It’s more than just not choosing absurd goals — it’s about realizing limitations toward reaching them, and keeping those in mind when defining metrics for success.  For instance, I have a two-week vacation planned for May.  Odds are, I’m not going to be able to go on a date during those two weeks, and I have to acknowledge that up front or I’m setting myself up for failure.  To that end, maybe my future girlfriend will go out of town at some point, or maybe she’ll live somewhere else.  If that’s the case, I can create a looser definition for “date” and stay true to the goal; maybe a 30 minute phone call counts.  Plus, I’m mentally prepared to miss a few weeks; if I hit about 40 dates, I’ll feel pretty good — that’s 40 dates I wouldn’t have gone on otherwise.  One way to deal with this is to think about it as a grading system; for recurring goals, how often do you meet them?  Maybe if you have a weekly goal that you hit 37 times, that’s 37 out of 52, which is 71% — you passed!  Granted, you got a C, but you still passed! Some goals may be graded on a curve — maybe 50% is a success, but there should be some non-binary passing threshold — even if 50% doesn’t pass, it’s better than 49%, and way better than 0%.

Another important aspect that I alluded to previously is treating each resolution separately.  If I resolve to limit my cake intake to one cake per day and also to say hi to one stranger per week, just because I eat two cakes on my birthday doesn’t mean I shouldn’t say hi to a stranger ever again — they’re completely unrelated, and failure of one should be treated as exactly that: one failure out of many successes.  Treating all of the resolutions as a group is basically exactly what happened to the housing market in 2008, only in reverse — those were highly correlated risks being modeled as uncorrelated, while this is uncorrelated outcomes being modeled as highly correlated.  Treating each resolution separately also reinforces the strategy of choosing multiple resolutions; of course it’d be a mistake to do so if I thought failure of one meant I should give up on all of them, but if I’m smart about it I won’t let the fact that I only got 55 hours of sleep allow me to write off a bunch of workouts.

This goes even beyond letting failure of reaching one goal stop you from reaching others; just because you missed a day, or a week, or a year doesn’t mean you should give up on the goal for the rest of the year.  Think about the idea of trying again year after year — this is basically that, writ really, really small.  The idea is that you want to make a habit out of your new goal.  If you want to work out 5 times a week, you have to engage the goal at its core: why do I want to work out 5 times a week? What does that get me? Typically, the resolutions are there because they reflect a path to a more abstract goal.  In this case, I want to work out 5 times per week because I want to be held accountable for my well-being — what I really want to do is get in the habit of taking care of myself and of working hard.  If I only work out 4 times one week, the worst thing I can do is say “well, that’s it — I guess I’m not doing this anymore!” and then each Cheetos for the rest of the year.  Instead, I should be working toward a place where failing to work out five times is an anomaly; I should be getting into the habit of succeeding at my resolution, and just like I don’t have a habit of drinking 12 glasses of scotch in a night, but occasionally I do, I should get in the habit of working out 5 times per week, but occasionally I won’t.  The point is that as long as your failures are anomalous, you’ve still basically succeeded in changing something about your life.

Track Your Progress

Once you’ve defined metrics for success, it’s important to track success.  It’s easy to give up on a goal that you think you’ve never hit — “I never work out 5 times per week, why even bother?”  It’s a lot harder to give up if you consistently come close to meeting it, or meet it frequently and don’t record it; you’re much less likely to give up on working out 5 times per week if you know you’ve worked out 4 times per week the last 3 weeks.  Plus, if you record successes for the entire month of January, then screw up in February, in March you can look back at January and know that you’re able to do it.

One other thing that I typically find helpful is to avoid resolutions to do a particular thing at some point that year, e.g., “This year I will go to Spain.”  (unless, of course, you already have a trip to Spain planned. Then you’re probably good).  The reason is that they’re hard to quantify where you are on that goal at any point — they’re binary.  I either have gone to Spain, or I have not; there’s no way to be like “well, I guess I have a B in going to Spain b/c I’ve hit that goal about 8/10 weeks so far in the year.”  Furthermore, you can put these off indefinitely; it’s hard to put a weekly goal off past Saturday before risking failure, but a year-long goal can be put off well into November before you start running into obvious, trackable trouble.  Recurring goals force you to engage with them; 1-off goals allow you to become complacent to their not-doneness.  The astute reader has noticed that “Join a band,” “Run an olympic triathlon,” and “Take dance lessons” all fit that bill, and they’re all on my list.  I’m aware of this, and this is a problem.  A better solution is to come up with intermediary goals (daily, weekly, monthly, for example) that can be evaluated on an ongoing basis — these are much easier to track, much harder to put off, and much easier to deal with missing.

Know When to Give Up

Finally, remember the point of the resolution — it’s to make yourself a better person.  If you look at a goal you’re not making, or even a goal you consistently achieve, and think it makes your life worse, there’s no reason not to give up on it.  So you thought giving up drinking at work was a great idea!  Then you realized you hate your job and it’s the only thing that allows you to function; or maybe you work in a creative department and everyone’s getting sloshed but you now.  Maybe you were that drunk dancing bear from King Joffrey’s wedding and now that you’re not drunk you can’t dance.  Knowing when to call it quits on certain goals can allow you to focus on the ones that still matter — you should be constantly evaluating your resolutions and whether they’re making you the person you want to be or holding you back in some way; if they’re holding you back, get rid of them.

Conclusion

That’s right, there’s a conclusion header.  Sucks to your cliché!

New Years is a great time to start fresh and try to make yourself a better person, but it’s not the only time.  If you identify some change you want to make in your life, it helps if you can come up with a solid plan of attack, quantifying the goal, and not letting temporary setbacks get in the way of ultimate success.   Get other people involved; they’re rooting for you, so don’t let them down.  Record your progress toward it.  Mentally contextualize the goal — remember why you created it in the first place, and stay true to that context; if that context changes, don’t be afraid to bail.

OK, at this point, I count 247 instances of “I,” “me,” or “my,” so I think I’ve done the job I set out to do.  Thanks for reading, and remember — statistically, you were probably switched with some other baby at the hospital and you’re not related by blood to the people you’ve called your parents your entire life.

– C

Hello World

Hi everybody! Hopefully this is obvious (if not by the layout of the blog — I don’t really know how blogs work? — then by the quality of the post), this is my first blog post.  It’s pretty exciting. You should definitely keep reading it.  Actually, on second thought, why are you reading it? I guarantee that you have way better things to be doing with your time than reading whatever nonsense I’m spewing.  If The Internet ever enforces emissions standards in the blogosphere, this blog will be the first thing shut down for failing to meet them.

Image
This panda is ashamed of you for reading this trash.

I guess a more pertinent question (and probably a good first post topic) is why am I writing it?  And to answer that you’ll need to know a little bit more (than you ever wanted to) about me.  Specifically, you need to know two things: 

  1. I enjoy writing
  2. I am a terrible person

The first point goes back to my youth — and what a youth it was!  I had a cat and, from what I’ve just said and what I’m about to say, apparently no friends.  I spent my time petting my cat or writing fiction based on real-world experiences.  You know, the standard stuff — stories about fighting with my brother … in space, because we were both generals of great space armies fighting an intergalactic war of good against evil (guess who was good and who was evil!).  Oh, and we could both use The Force and had at least one epic lightsaber battle per story.  So, all-in-all, an art mirroring reality sorta thing.  Also there were Serengeti animals that could fly fighter jets and routinely took on massive poaching syndicates.  If you don’t see how the first story and second story can be same-world canon, you probably shouldn’t be reading this blog.  (This is all true, btw.  Maybe if I’m bored or lazy I will manage to dig some of it up and we’ll get a blast-from-the-past highlights post, but if we’re lucky all of those stories are lost forever and will never see the light of day again). 

The second point is a more recent development — I swear I used to be a good person (it’s hard to be a bad one when you spend so much time writing terrible stories that you have no human interaction).  But of course identifying a problem is the first step toward fixing it, which I try to do every January in the form of making a bunch of New Year’s resolutions I know I won’t or can’t keep.  In an effort to spend more time doing things that enrich my life (while simultaneously impoverishing the world at large), I’ve resolved this year to start writing again — so bingo, blog-o.  

Knowing both of those things (the more you know!), you can better understand why I’m writing this and why it will be, in almost all cases, totally unreadable garbage.  I’ll be trying to update about once a week.  The format is likely to be a hodgepodge of stupid nonsense — short stories (or parts of short stories), journal entries, or aimless musings about anything or nothing at all.  Really, I just wanted a place to write down my thoughts once a week, so they don’t get lost to time forever (what a shame that would be).  

Since the goal is really just to allow me to write stupid nonsense, I’m assuming that there will be basically zero readership.  I cannot stress to you enough how totally into that idea I am.  With no readership comes no pressure — no pressure to make sense, no pressure to post good content, and no pressure to follow a subject or theme.  Since I can’t (and won’t) do any of those, this suits me just fine!  That said, if you somehow end up here and read an entire post, do me a favor and write me a comment.  I probably won’t read it, since I’ll assume it’s extremely negative, but it would be nice to know if someone is picking up what I’m putting down, if for no other reason than to know exactly how much pressure I should be feel to do those things above.  

Cheers,

– C