In airports (LAX comes to mind), sometimes you can get outdoors after security by visiting the smoking area! I don’t smoke; I just like fresh air and sunlight. But sometimes the “smoking area” is the best place to get that.
You might like social engineering content. I have occasionally bluffed my way past security personnel to get things done, and even (when highly confident that they were incorrect) ignored them saying “you can’t go there” while obviously making no attempt to stop me, just to see what would happen. They did not stop me, nor summon anyone to remove me from the area where they claimed I “couldn’t” be.
It’s highly agentic but probably immoral by most standards to abuse return policies and use places with generous policies as cheap or free rental options.
Identifying and exploiting certain personal finance loopholes may count: Compare spending HSA funds with the provided debit card to making the same purchases on a credit card, reimbursing them from the HSA, and keeping the rewards or sign-up bonus from the credit card company.
Did you know you can go buy a massage chair, which pretty much looks like a regular chair, for a few hundred bucks? Guests are often amazed that I have a massage chair in my living room but I spent less on it than one might on a top-of-the-line recliner.
Have you done the exercise of watching your internal monologue for a day and noting every time you think you “can’t” do something, and then transforming those into “prefer not to” by identifying some ways you could accomplish it but choose not to because the tradeoffs aren’t worth it.
“I can’t fly” becomes “I don’t like the hassle of going to an airport unless I’m going to a specific destination, and the risks of current jetpack technology outweigh the rewards, and I could go paragliding or wingsuiting in one of those wind tunnels if I booked an appointment, and I guess if I wanted to allocate the funds I could take pilot lessons”.
“I can’t defy gravity” becomes “Earth’s gravity applies to me because I’m so close to the planet, but if I dedicated my entire life to becoming a billionaire at all costs I could probably do some space tourism. Actually humans do a lot of things that make g-forces go other directions, like roller coasters and those carnival things with a spinning room, which are all things I could go to if I’m patient or build if I’m risk-tolerant. And I can make things pretend to defy gravity by using magnets or tensegrity principles or static electricity or very powerful fans or all sorts of other tricks.”
Have you done the exercise of watching your internal monologue for a day and noting every time you think you “can’t” do something, and then transforming those into “prefer not to” by identifying some ways you could accomplish it but choose not to because the tradeoffs aren’t worth it.
I think I’ve started to do a bit without really knowing that I’m doing it. Just like I cringe (and have cringed even before I read the Sequences) when someone says “I’ll try to do [something],” I’ve started to develop a slight revulsion to “I can’t.” This instinct not nearly as strong as I want it to be and I don’t think of all the possibilities that could happen.
Well, thanks for the brain-worm, I’ve been viewing my own behavior through the lens of “am I being agentic about this?” all day =)
You mentioned in passing the theme that agentic-looking outcomes arise from disregarding unnecessary constraints. In watching myself, I notice that my agentic-looking behaviors and accomplishments often arise from rigidly applying an explicit list of gestures-worth-trying, even when I don’t expect them to work.
For instance, I dislike looking at labels on most stuff, so I devote a moderate amount of time to removing unneeded ones. I’ve developed a checklist of techniques which sometimes get sticky stuff un-stuck from other stuff. The list includes water, acetone, heat, paint stripper, sandpaper, magic eraser, razor blades, and other varyingly destructive techniques. I’ve trained myself to consider it a rule that before I just tolerate looking at an unsightly sticker, I should rule out each intervention on the list. By being inflexible about this approach, I manage to remove all kinds of annoying stickers that I didn’t expect would really come off.
Sometimes I also get novel results by going down the list of all the tools I have access to and considering how each one would impact the problem if I used it. It’s honestly pretty great how much force a single smallish human can exert with a manual cable winch, a cheater bar if the winch’s handle is too short for good leverage, and some carabiners and lifting slings rated for 10,000lbs...
Oh, and if you stick stickers directly to the back of your laptop’s screen, consider first putting down either a single full-sized sticker or a protective case. That way when the machine eventually dies you can frame or keep the collection.
Similarly:
In airports (LAX comes to mind), sometimes you can get outdoors after security by visiting the smoking area! I don’t smoke; I just like fresh air and sunlight. But sometimes the “smoking area” is the best place to get that.
You might like social engineering content. I have occasionally bluffed my way past security personnel to get things done, and even (when highly confident that they were incorrect) ignored them saying “you can’t go there” while obviously making no attempt to stop me, just to see what would happen. They did not stop me, nor summon anyone to remove me from the area where they claimed I “couldn’t” be.
It’s highly agentic but probably immoral by most standards to abuse return policies and use places with generous policies as cheap or free rental options.
Identifying and exploiting certain personal finance loopholes may count: Compare spending HSA funds with the provided debit card to making the same purchases on a credit card, reimbursing them from the HSA, and keeping the rewards or sign-up bonus from the credit card company.
Did you know you can go buy a massage chair, which pretty much looks like a regular chair, for a few hundred bucks? Guests are often amazed that I have a massage chair in my living room but I spent less on it than one might on a top-of-the-line recliner.
Have you done the exercise of watching your internal monologue for a day and noting every time you think you “can’t” do something, and then transforming those into “prefer not to” by identifying some ways you could accomplish it but choose not to because the tradeoffs aren’t worth it.
“I can’t fly” becomes “I don’t like the hassle of going to an airport unless I’m going to a specific destination, and the risks of current jetpack technology outweigh the rewards, and I could go paragliding or wingsuiting in one of those wind tunnels if I booked an appointment, and I guess if I wanted to allocate the funds I could take pilot lessons”.
“I can’t defy gravity” becomes “Earth’s gravity applies to me because I’m so close to the planet, but if I dedicated my entire life to becoming a billionaire at all costs I could probably do some space tourism. Actually humans do a lot of things that make g-forces go other directions, like roller coasters and those carnival things with a spinning room, which are all things I could go to if I’m patient or build if I’m risk-tolerant. And I can make things pretend to defy gravity by using magnets or tensegrity principles or static electricity or very powerful fans or all sorts of other tricks.”
Even more awesome examples! Amazing!
This seems really insightful:
I think I’ve started to do a bit without really knowing that I’m doing it. Just like I cringe (and have cringed even before I read the Sequences) when someone says “I’ll try to do [something],” I’ve started to develop a slight revulsion to “I can’t.” This instinct not nearly as strong as I want it to be and I don’t think of all the possibilities that could happen.
Well, thanks for the brain-worm, I’ve been viewing my own behavior through the lens of “am I being agentic about this?” all day =)
You mentioned in passing the theme that agentic-looking outcomes arise from disregarding unnecessary constraints. In watching myself, I notice that my agentic-looking behaviors and accomplishments often arise from rigidly applying an explicit list of gestures-worth-trying, even when I don’t expect them to work.
For instance, I dislike looking at labels on most stuff, so I devote a moderate amount of time to removing unneeded ones. I’ve developed a checklist of techniques which sometimes get sticky stuff un-stuck from other stuff. The list includes water, acetone, heat, paint stripper, sandpaper, magic eraser, razor blades, and other varyingly destructive techniques. I’ve trained myself to consider it a rule that before I just tolerate looking at an unsightly sticker, I should rule out each intervention on the list. By being inflexible about this approach, I manage to remove all kinds of annoying stickers that I didn’t expect would really come off.
Sometimes I also get novel results by going down the list of all the tools I have access to and considering how each one would impact the problem if I used it. It’s honestly pretty great how much force a single smallish human can exert with a manual cable winch, a cheater bar if the winch’s handle is too short for good leverage, and some carabiners and lifting slings rated for 10,000lbs...
Oh, and if you stick stickers directly to the back of your laptop’s screen, consider first putting down either a single full-sized sticker or a protective case. That way when the machine eventually dies you can frame or keep the collection.