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  • Finished reading: Artemis by Andy Weir 📚

    → 2:41 PM, Oct 29
  • Finished reading: The Martian by Andy Weir 📚

    → 7:57 PM, Oct 11
  • Finished reading: Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson 📚

    → 5:29 PM, Oct 3
  • Finished reading: The Sun Also Rises by Ernest Hemingway 📚

    → 5:34 AM, Sep 25
  • Finished reading: Howl’s Moving Castle by Diana Wynne Jones 📚

    → 7:09 PM, Sep 14
  • Finished reading: Where’d You Park Your Spaceship? by Rob Bell 📚

    → 7:09 PM, Sep 14
  • When I’m reading a book, I have a hard time taking notes or summarizing it in my own words… I can’t do it. I hit a complete block. I’m overwhelmed.

    But then an hour later, once I’m no longer so close to the author’s words, I’m able to talk and write about what I read — summarized or in detail.

    Why?

    → 8:12 PM, Jul 12
  • Finished reading: Autumn by Karl Ove Knausgaard 📚

    → 7:55 PM, Jul 12
  • Finished reading: A Moveable Feast by Ernest Hemingway 📚 It was a book and it had very good sentences.

    → 8:29 PM, May 15
  • Finished reading: Girl in a Band by Kim Gordon 📚Kim played in Sonic Youth, a band I completely missed out on until now! It’s been fun reading and listening to their albums.

    → 6:59 PM, Apr 18
  • Starting again

    I worked out yesterday for the first time in almost two years.

    In total, I did 45 squats with hardly any weight on the bar. It felt good and I felt strong through the full range of movement. It took me about ten minutes.

    Today I’m sore AF, but I got out there again. For two minutes — HA!

    Depending on the weather tomorrow I’ll either row or go for a walk. Looking forward to building up the momentum, bit by bit.

    → 7:17 PM, Mar 28
  • Finished reading: Crazy Rich Asians by Kevin Kwan 📚It was great and I enjoyed it immensely, though this is one of the rare occasions where I’d say I liked the movie more than the book. If I say more, I’d spoil it, so I’ll stop there.

    → 8:00 AM, Mar 2
  • Finished reading: Surrender by Bono 📚I enjoyed most of it, especially the stories. It felt like a slog when it got philosophical or heady. At 550 pages, I think it’d be better split into two volumes.

    → 6:05 AM, Feb 22
  • Posting code to Micro.blog

    👋

    100.times do
      puts "Ulysses supports code"
    end
    

    I’m not really sure what this will do, so I’m curious how it’ll work out!

    → 11:49 AM, Feb 11
  • Great post about Kicking the social media habit with “one sec” by JP Camara

    → 6:22 PM, Feb 9
  • Getting into printing and bookmaking. I’m not sure if it’ll be a public hobby — shared on the internet — or a private one shared among friends. Or perhaps both… when you’re unknown enough, even a public hobby is private. 📚

    → 7:21 AM, Feb 9
  • A desk calendar feels like a daily chore to rip off the page from yesterday and throw it away.

    → 7:18 AM, Feb 9
  • Finished reading: Open by Andre Agassi 📚it was really great. It hits hard, moves fast, and you don’t need to know a thing about tennis to enjoy it; so much as you enjoy people.

    → 7:09 AM, Feb 7
  • I put my AirPods Pro through the wash and they got super clean but don’t work anymore 🤣

    → 6:49 AM, Feb 6
  • Bailing on books

    When I was in college, I read a ton, but I bailed on most books I started. This wasn’t for a lack of attention, but rather was an abundance of intention. I wanted to read more of the things I wanted to read and less of the things I didn’t want to read.

    Each semester, I needed to read over a thousand pages a week to keep up with the course work — never mind what I actually enjoyed reading outside of that.

    I discovered that expanding my mind through reading was immensely satisfying. The fastest way toward expansion was to ingest as many ideas as possible as quickly as possible. But the trick was to only go deep into the areas that I was most interested in. If I finished every book I found boring, I’d be missing out.

    In most academic writing, the author outlines their entire argument in their introduction. The hundreds of pages following are often to fill the rest of the book. I guess you can’t write a book if you don’t write all those extra pages.

    Lots of authors hooked me with their introduction, and I caught myself, at two or three in the morning, realizing I had finished their book. Good on them.

    Today, my nightstand is overflowing with books I want to read. I find myself starting five or six books at a time and letting the ideas crash into each other. I have books upstairs and downstairs, scattered across rooms. If I’m in a room and I want to read, I pick up a book and start reading.

    I finish most of what I start, but I still don’t mind bailing on a book.

    → 8:14 PM, Jan 31
  • Finished reading: Circe by Madeline Miller 📚it was fantastically written and a page turner. It helped to know some of the other Greek myths and stories beforehand. They provided anchor points along the way to make Circe’s stories more enjoyable.

    → 6:35 AM, Jan 30
  • Finished reading: Laws Of Ux by Jon Yablonski earlier this year. Fast and interesting read, coming in at only 100 pages. 📚

    → 7:24 PM, Jan 29
  • The library

    The year before covid landed, we moved to an apartment that was in walking distance of a library. We’d spend a few days a month browsing the stacks for books or movies to enjoy, and rush home with our spoils.

    I haven’t often been inside a library over the past few years — I’m usually working during library hours — but there are a few things I’ve learned about my local library:

    1. You can borrow digital books using an app like Libby. For our library system there are tens of thousands of books and thousands of audiobooks available.
    2. You can borrow video games. There are a ton of recent titles almost always available. I guess no one knows libraries have them?
    3. Libraries are a great hub for public events. Ours hosts concerts every week during the summer on the front lawn.
    4. It’s an amazing thing to read a book and not be obligated to provide it a home. I love books, but it can be nice to give them back!
    → 4:01 PM, Jan 29
  • Ikea Lights

    I really appreciate what Ikea’s doing here with these lights: A sleek charging station, cork bottoms so they sit softly on any furniture, and they’re powered by rechargeable AA batteries. Clever.

    Portable lights like these are so versatile and can instantly make a room more cozy.

    → 8:12 PM, Jan 27
  • Finished reading: Tomorrow, and Tomorrow, and Tomorrow by Gabrielle Zevin 📚

    → 12:00 AM, Jan 24
  • Finished reading: What’s a Knucka? by Rob Bell 📚

    → 12:00 AM, Jan 1
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