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    Joined: Nov 2012
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    I'm very much a big cat in terms of spurting, both in work and socially. Long periods of thinking, planning, and rest are punctuated by short all-out work sessions or social events. It's how I work best. I need that rest to build up to the work, or the final product suffers. For example, after mulling over a concept for a while, I wrote a children's book start to finish in under 40 minutes last week. I'll isolate myself for weeks, then plan a 12 hour day with non-stop socializing.

    DS23mo is young, but I see signs of this tendency in him, too. He learns new, and sometimes pretty significant, skills as quickly as turning on a light switch after seemigly no prior interest or effort. Speaking--one day nothing, the next day sentences. Locomotion--in arms one day (no crawling), walking with minimal assistance the next. Decoding words--from no interest to being able to sound out most CVC words in a day.


    What is to give light must endure burning.
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    Originally Posted by Zen Scanner
    Originally Posted by Dude
    To me, it doesn't feel like sprinting. I suppose to the cheetah, it doesn't feel like sprinting, either... just normal running. Then the cheetah wonders at the plodding pace of the lion.

    What I was meaning by sprinting... is I have a mode A and a mode B. Mode A, I can do all day long. In mode B, I am running at a few SDs higher in IQ, can finish four hours work in an hour. But when I hit a wall I'm done/shot for the rest of the day, mentally exhausted. While "sprinting," I'm likely to be twitchy, rock in place, tap, be very short, inattentive, no sense of time.

    Yes. Flow state = "sprint" state. But I have no real stamina to do it day in and day out, for an 8 hour workday.

    I can do a two week run of 20 hour days, but then I'm not much good for mundane things for a month.


    Schrödinger's cat walks into a bar. And doesn't.
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