Making non-trivial posts carries psychological costs that I feel quite acutely. I would love to be able to plough through this (c.f. Comfort Zone Expansion) by making a lot of non-trivial posts.
Unfortunately, making non-trivial posts also carries time costs that I feel quite acutely. I have quite fastidious editorial standards that make writing anything quite time-consuming (you would be alarmed at how much time I’ve spent writing this response), and this is compounded by engaging in long, sticky discussions.
The Weird Alliances post was an attempt to write something quickly to lower standards, and as a result it was of lower quality than I would have liked. This made the psychological cost greater. I’ve yet to figure out how to unknot this perverse trade-off between psychological and time costs, but it means I would prefer to space out making posts.
Making non-trivial posts carries psychological costs that I feel quite acutely. I would love to be able to plough through this (c.f. Comfort Zone Expansion) by making a lot of non-trivial posts.
Unfortunately, making non-trivial posts also carries time costs that I feel quite acutely. I have quite fastidious editorial standards that make writing anything quite time-consuming (you would be alarmed at how much time I’ve spent writing this response), and this is compounded by engaging in long, sticky discussions.
The Weird Alliances post was an attempt to write something quickly to lower standards, and as a result it was of lower quality than I would have liked. This made the psychological cost greater. I’ve yet to figure out how to unknot this perverse trade-off between psychological and time costs, but it means I would prefer to space out making posts.
Ah, OK, understood. Best of luck with the unknotting. (I’d offer advice, but I have much the same problem myself.)