If you’re reading this, it means I succeeded in my mission to the future. What follows is a human year’s worth of data condensed into minutes.

From the pandemic to politics to (closer to home) the great resignation — finding the motivation and skills to navigate any one of the many dominating events of 2021 is something I think we can all relate to.

This article is a summary of the best ideas and thoughts I came across (or copied) in 2021 that have helped me navigate these uncertain times, which I think others would also find helpful.

From complexity management to existentialism — there’s something here for everyone:

On working with complexity and why simplicity is dangerous

Reading List

The Simple Life of Humans (Hackernoon)

How to Step Out of Disorder A Leader’s Framework for Decision Making Can you make complexity simple Making Sense of Complexity

On leveraging the power of humour

Reading List

Use Naming to Make People Laugh in Our Post-Apocalyptic Zoom World (Hackernoon)

Henri Bergson On Humor No Laughing Matter What the Romans Found Funny

On having better arguments and debates

Reading List

How to Earn the Right to Argue

The Work Required to Have an Opinion How to have better arguments online

On copying ideas to boost creativity

Reading List

When to Copy Ideas, When to Steal Ideas (davnicwil.com) An Artist Explains What “Great Artists Steal” Really Means (lifehacker.com) How to be successful: steal ideas and copy people (web.archive.org)

On the responsibility of communicating ideas properly

Reading List

How Amazonian Thinking Turned Me Into a Remote Work Optimist (Hackernoon)

Working Backwards, Book

What I’ve Learned in 45 Years in the Software Industry

On being more inspiring and persuasive

Reading List

Engineering Teams Need Inspiration to Thrive and Succeed (Hackernoon)

Start With Why How Great Leaders Inspire Everyone To Take Action, Book

On the crisis of how design impacts society

Reading List

What is this? The case for continually questioning our online experience (systems-souls-society.com) Walter Benjamin Distraction (Philosophise This), YouTube

On the dangers of being successful

Reading List

The curse of success (Hackernoon)

Episode 156 Emil Cioran Part 2 Failure and Suicide, Podcast The Philosopher of Failure Emil Cioran’s Heights of Despair (Los Angeles Review of Books) Is Success the Enemy of Freedom (greaterwrong.com)

On making time for yourself

Reading List

Getting Started With the Cult of Cognitive Walking (Hackernoon)

On the Link Between Great Thinking and Obsessive Walking Stanford study finds walking improves creativity (news.stanford.edu) Focused and Diffuse Two Modes of Thinking (Farnam Street)


Hope you enjoyed this. See you all next year!

A good conscience is a continual Christmas. — Benjamin Franklin


BONUS GEEKINESS

A few weeks ago, I booted up a python script to run all my published articles from 2021 through a natural language processor to identify any interesting patterns.

I hoped to identify the main entities that influenced my thinking, then subsequently load those entities into a Neo4J graph database to find the commonalities.

The results were interesting yet, soulless. In the same way that Spotify can tell you your most played songs, it says nothing about what those songs meant to you.

In 2021, ‘Cognition’ was by far the most connected entity node within my graph — which I suppose makes sense.

For the last 2 years, I have been obsessed with cracking the code of becoming more creative, persuasive, more … intelligent. Like gasoline on a bonfire, tools like Obsidian have only encouraged me to go deeper into unhealthy metacognition.

I still feel there is something interesting here, but I'm not sure what exactly. Hopefully, 2022 will be more enlightening.