I have been using this exact method for a few years. It is absolutely the most reliable method for getting something specific and critical done in an intermediate time frame (say 2 weeks to 3 months), but it’s kind of the nuclear option of willpower and should be used sparingly since 1) it relies on being the nuclear option, if you ever fail then you would lose faith in the method 2) it absolutely sucks, since it’s usually something sucky you decide to do and you have bargained away the usual weaseling out tactics 3) Cthulhu doesn’t like it when you break your promises.
it absolutely sucks, since it’s usually something sucky you decide to do and you have bargained away the usual weaseling out tactics
That’s a really good point. Robin likes to talk about this. Someone may enjoy eating fatty foods more than they would enjoy being fit and healthy. But people who express a desire to be fit and healthy get more social prestige, so the optimum case for them is to think they would be better off dieting, while continuing to eat as much as always. These people think they have akrasia, but don’t. If someone gives them a way to “cure” their “akrasia”, they’ll just end out unhappy.
I got the impression that Robin thinks this explains most or all akrasia; I wouldn’t go that far, but I think it explains some.
Someone may enjoy eating fatty foods more than they would enjoy being fit and healthy.
Or, like in my case, someone may not very much enjoy eating fatty foods, but when they start, they lose a bunch of weight and become more fit and healthy.
I have been using this exact method for a few years. It is absolutely the most reliable method for getting something specific and critical done in an intermediate time frame (say 2 weeks to 3 months), but it’s kind of the nuclear option of willpower and should be used sparingly since 1) it relies on being the nuclear option, if you ever fail then you would lose faith in the method 2) it absolutely sucks, since it’s usually something sucky you decide to do and you have bargained away the usual weaseling out tactics 3) Cthulhu doesn’t like it when you break your promises.
That’s a really good point. Robin likes to talk about this. Someone may enjoy eating fatty foods more than they would enjoy being fit and healthy. But people who express a desire to be fit and healthy get more social prestige, so the optimum case for them is to think they would be better off dieting, while continuing to eat as much as always. These people think they have akrasia, but don’t. If someone gives them a way to “cure” their “akrasia”, they’ll just end out unhappy.
I got the impression that Robin thinks this explains most or all akrasia; I wouldn’t go that far, but I think it explains some.
Or, like in my case, someone may not very much enjoy eating fatty foods, but when they start, they lose a bunch of weight and become more fit and healthy.
I find that if I reinforce myself with an M&M or other small candy every time I complete the sucky task, it stops feeling sucky after about a week