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Working Hard, Hardly Working

2026-05-14 19:11:45

In my life I have struggled mightily to find situations that allows me to spend my time working at 95-105% of my sustainable long-term capacity.

I have had situations where I worked at 120% of my sustainable long-term capacity, and burnt out.

I have had situations where I worked at 20-50% of my sustainable long-term capacity, and was bored.

Where do I find the situations that lets me work hard but not unreasonably hard? Why is this so hard to find?

You're Weirder Than You Think

2026-05-13 19:11:33

One of my long-time hobby-horses is that people are way weirder than they realize, and that our politics would look different if more people understood how massively unrepresentative they are of the rest of the population. So here's a little quiz designed to demonstrate how unrepresentative you are (of the US population – sorry non-Americans).

I did shockingly little of the work on this, so compliments should largely go to Claude, but if you have complaints or think this is wrong please do let me know. If you're interested in the process you can see the conversation here.

How Unrepresentative Are You?
Self-Portrait № 01 A Quiz · 7 Questions
How unrepresentative are you?

You probably don't look much like the average American.

1,000 randomly chosen Americans 1,000 match you
all 1,000 still match — answer questions below to narrow the field

Seven questions. Each one cuts the country into pieces — and as you answer, you'll watch the dots that look like you fade out in real time.

The percentages aren't multiplied marginals. Every dot's behavior comes from real respondents in the General Social Survey, so the correlations between your answers are built in.

Question 1 of 7
Press Y or N — or click
Findings

Where each answer puts you
    Methodology & sources

    Data comes from the General Social Survey (GSS) cumulative file, 1972–2024, Release 3. We use respondents from the four most recent waves (2018, 2021, 2022, 2024), restricted to those who answered all seven questions — 4,326 people, weighted by wtssps (NORC's recommended post-stratified weight). Three of the seven questions (about God, gun ownership, and views on same-sex relations) are asked of only a sub-sample of GSS respondents in each wave, which is why the complete-case sample is smaller than the full recent wave count.

    The widget stores a 128-cell joint distribution (one cell for every combination of yes/no answers). After each answer, it sums the cells consistent with your answers so far — giving the true conditional probability that a random American still matches you, with all correlations between answers preserved. After all 7 answers, the sum collapses to a single cell.

    Some rare combinations have very few observations, so percentages below ~0.1% are noisy. One cell with no observations is given a 0.05% floor.

    Evolution Everywhere

    2026-05-12 19:11:33

    1) Evolution of species by natural selection is the classic of the genre, of course. If you have a bunch of finches trying to drink nectar out of flowers, the finches with the long pointy beaks can more easily get deep in those nectaries, and over time the finch population becomes dominated by the long of beak.

    2) I think some of my more anti-capitalist friends are flabbergasted at the idea that the invisible hand could possibly guide businesses to figure out what customers want. If you've ever been inside a business, that doesn't seem to be how it works! But that's not the theory of capitalism, really: it's that if a bunch of different businesses try to please customers, even if they're all wildly flailing around at random, the ones that happen to figure out What People Want will stay in business, and the ones that don't will die out.

    3) What we post online in any algorithmic environment is subject to brutal evolutionary pressures. Even here on my relatively insulated blog, it's hard to ignore the incentive to write what people seem to enjoy. E.g. you guys love lists, empirically, and all my most popular posts in the last few months started with a number, so here I am writing another list. But this effect is 1000000x fold on a platform like Instagram or Twitter or YouTube, where your most popular offerings can get 1000000x the attention. Soon you find yourself desperately iterating towards whatever the algorithm most rewards from you, until one day you wake up and you're posting bulls**t rage-bait because your audience applauds when you do.

    4) What I don't think is nearly as heavily acknowledged is that the same pressure exists in our non-algorithmic environments, like our everyday lives. Every time you say an opinion at a party you get feedback based on other people's responses; without even necessarily knowing it consciously, you get trained that some opinions are far more popular than others; unless you really make huge and deliberate efforts, the natural glide-path is towards only saying the views that get you good responses. It's like social media just without the quantification, and with real people whose feelings about you matter immensely, and who are more likely to be selection-biased to have similar views to each other versus the diversity of the internet as a whole. I sometimes wonder if the only progress in society is made by disagreeable people who are able to withstand the crushing social pressure to only say (and think) already locally-popular things.

    5) At least in Europe, professional sports leagues are evolutionary: the teams at the bottom of the league get demoted, the teams at the top (of the league below) get promoted in their place. American sports somehow don't function this way, they're like a managed zoo where the animals are insulated from evolutionary pressures, I am pretty confused about it.

    6) Corporate politics is all about evolution. The most successful managers sneak more and more of their proteges into the firm, the least successful managers get booted from the firm and don't get to hire any more people in, and can't protect the people they hired in previously. Fitness is determined by your fitness at playing the game, not at how good you are at [thing the organization was supposedly set up to do].

    7) Political parties get formed by evolution: the ones whose platforms are unpopular wither away, the ones whose platforms are popular live to fight another election. And this is true fractally for coalitions within each party, and politicians within each coalition. The upshot is that, over time, parties can evolve beyond recognition as they seek to respond to the changing environment and survive within it. And as always with evolution, this doesn't necessarily mean the actors are manipulative or even conscious of what they're doing: it could be that 100% of politicians are 100% sincere in their beliefs, but over time the politicians with unpopular beliefs will get selected out of the party, until the only people left are the ones who hold the views that the majority of the selectorate endorses. Survival of the fittest, where "fitness" doesn't mean "good" but just "good at surviving."

    You Didn't Build That

    2026-05-11 19:11:53

    Look, I realise this is an oddly specific gripe but I do feel it strongly whenever I see a highway or a public building and the name of a politician (often a Mayor, sometimes a Governor or President) on it: this just shouldn't be allowed. The politician did not pay for it, the public did. And it's naked electioneering on behalf of the incumbent, trying to get voters to associate the incumbent's name with public spending, which is unfair on the non-incumbents who will sooner or later be trying to unseat her. It's nakedly against the spirit of liberal democracy, I don't know where it started and I don't know why we put up with it.

    Some Newsletter

    2026-05-08 19:11:49

    For most newsletters, I would like to receive neither All Newsletter or No Newsletter, but Some Newsletter – depending on the author, I'd like to get 10% or 20% or 50% of their best posts.

    I don't think as a writer I have any way of knowing which posts are great. (There's definitely posts where I feel confident they are not-amazing, I just want to get that idea out my head, but I don't think I've ever correctly predicted a break-out post would break out).

    Here's how I wish the newsletter-sending business worked: I would just mail out whatever's in my head, at whatever volume, and you all would opt in to a certain threshold of email receipt. You could choose whether you want to get 100% of my posts, or only the best 50%, or only the best 10%.

    Each day the newsletter would first go out to the people who agreed to receive 100% of posts, and they would vote on how good it was, and only if it crossed a certain threshold of positive votes would it get sent to the 90%ers, who would then vote on how good it was, and so on till it had either hit its quality-bucket or (in the rare 10% of cases) been sent to the whole list.

    If you're worried that superfans have different tastes than the average, you could instead set it up so that each post gets sent to a random 10% of the audience, that 10% votes, and then the post gets sent out to a suitable share of the remaining audience. So it's no longer the case that you can get only the best N%, but you can get the best N% plus some ungraded posts, where your contribution to the project is to grade them.

    Another theoretical way to do this, especially for a paid newsletter, would be to have a small pool of people who volunteer as the Test Pool (in lieu of paying for the newsletter), and they vote on the quality, and then the curated selections get sent to the paid reader pool. I'm not sure how you could possibly incentivize the voters to vote accurately, though – famously the Oscar voting was historically full of people who had not-seen the movies voting on which was the best one, and that's in a setting where the result matter a lot.

    One problem with this system is if/when people have idiosyncratic views about which posts are best. This seems obviously true, some posts will resonate with some people and not others, but I'm not sure how to avoid that. At the extreme you could imagine a recommender algorithm, "people who enjoyed Post X also enjoyed Post Y", but 1) that totally seems like too much work for a simple newsletter, and 2) maybe it's just reinventing social media from first principles?

    I'm pretty sure I wrote this idea before, maybe in an Is This Anything? post, but since I'm not sure maybe you won't be either.

    The Work Undone

    2026-05-07 19:11:12

    I famously have some issues with email procrastination. It’s pretty classic situation: I didn’t reply to an email right away, and I feel avoidant about the fact that you've been waiting 4 days, and that feels really bad after two weeks, which induces guilt about the fact I didn't reply for a month.

    Here’s the thing. Every so often, for reasons largely beyond me, I sit down for a day or week and MOSTLY clear my inbox: I send a bunch of messages saying so sorry for late reply, and I mean every one of them, and I slowly chug my way until there's only a few unanswered messages left.

    But I really, really struggle to get that down to zero. When there’s ~10 emails left in the queue, some dastardly imp inside me pulls me away.

    I used to think this was a classic selection effect: I cleared out the easier ones, and what's left is the hardest of the hard, and that's why it's left. But empirically I don't think that's actually true: I often clear some of the hardest ones first, and then some easy ones, and what's left is a mish-mash of easy and hard.

    What it feels like, emotionally, is that some part of me doesn't want the work to be done; that some part of me dreads having answered all the emails, or (better) secretly wants the comfort of the partially-unfinished task. If anyone can explain this to me I'd be grateful.