Great post! I’ve also experienced this build-up at many points in my life, this framework seems really useful.
One thing I’ve found particularly helpful for addressing this is freewriting. Just sit down every morning with your laptop and commit to writing 750 words. Don’t constrain what you write about, just let it be a stream of consciousness. You can write about your favorite type of pizza or whatever, but in practice you’ll probably get bored of shallow things like this pretty quickly and start diving into more meaningful things. You’ll then start noticing small annoyances that you weren’t consciously aware of before and you’ll gradually process them. And there will probably be a lot of them, so the cumulative effect of doing this consistently is really large.
Typical mind fallacy obviously applies here, freewriting has been life-changing for me but it might be less effective for you. But I’m guessing a large enough subset of LW readers is sufficiently similar to me that this is high-EV to try. Note that it can take a few days to start getting value out of this, I’d recommend committing to doing this everyday for 2 weeks. If after 2 weeks you don’t notice your emotional potential energy decreasing, it’s probably not a good fit for you.
Another thing that works somewhat well for me is just having some time without much external stimulation, e.g. going for regular walks without my phone and with earplugs. Again, it just lets your mind wander and eventually discover small things that have been bothering you and need to be processed.
Great post! I’ve also experienced this build-up at many points in my life, this framework seems really useful.
One thing I’ve found particularly helpful for addressing this is freewriting. Just sit down every morning with your laptop and commit to writing 750 words. Don’t constrain what you write about, just let it be a stream of consciousness. You can write about your favorite type of pizza or whatever, but in practice you’ll probably get bored of shallow things like this pretty quickly and start diving into more meaningful things. You’ll then start noticing small annoyances that you weren’t consciously aware of before and you’ll gradually process them. And there will probably be a lot of them, so the cumulative effect of doing this consistently is really large.
Typical mind fallacy obviously applies here, freewriting has been life-changing for me but it might be less effective for you. But I’m guessing a large enough subset of LW readers is sufficiently similar to me that this is high-EV to try. Note that it can take a few days to start getting value out of this, I’d recommend committing to doing this everyday for 2 weeks. If after 2 weeks you don’t notice your emotional potential energy decreasing, it’s probably not a good fit for you.
Another thing that works somewhat well for me is just having some time without much external stimulation, e.g. going for regular walks without my phone and with earplugs. Again, it just lets your mind wander and eventually discover small things that have been bothering you and need to be processed.
I do find thinking on paper (a bit more intentional than freewriting, but the same vibe) to be particularly helpful, I agree. Just like walks.
The reasons I don’t find them enough is that:
They generally happen after the fact, which means that some build up happened
Personally, I’m rarely able to release all the build up just through thinking on paper (happens, just rare)
Still, I find it’s a good way to build emotional potential energy much slower, and to notice when you really need to have a full break/sabbaticl.