- Make it meaningful and personal.
- Keep it open-endedāyou shouldnāt have a year of only learning a new language.
- Keep track of your progress, however youād like to do that.
- Use your tracked progress to encourage you through the tough times.
- I want to understand what I want from my life more than I currently do. Who do I want to be in the future? What sort of work do I really want to do?
- I want to understand my wife better. I think a relationship is a long voyage of understanding, but it still takes day-to-day effort. I want to be the best person I can be for her, so how do I do that?
- I want to understand how to be a better, more patient son for my mom. Iāve noticed that our relationship has gotten more combative over the years. I donāt like that, and I want it to improve.
- How can I become more kind, understanding, and patient?
-
Onward: This oneās probably thought of as a ālesserā Pixar film, but I thought it was heartfelt and a lot of fun. Theyāre able to do that like no one else. (ā ā ā ā )
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The Good Liar: A heist-drama for the older crowd (of which I count myself amongst). I could watch Helene Mirren and Ian McKellen play off each other all day. (ā ā ā ½)
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Avengers: Endgame: This one is as thrilling, engaging, and affecting as it was the first time I saw it. This time I got to enjoy it with my wife, and even she enjoyed it nearly as much as I did. (ā ā ā ā ā )
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In & of Itself: I fell into the hype around this one and Iām glad I did. I had no idea what it was going to be going into it, and I think thatās the best way to watch this magical (in many ways) performance. (ā ā ā ā ½)
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A Hidden Life: This should really just be required viewing for everybody. I didnāt know the story of Franz JƤgerstƤtter and his family before watching it, but my life has improved in great ways since. (ā ā ā ā ā )
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An American Pickle: I think I appreciate the technical accomplishment of this film more than I do the story. It was okayānot that funny, but not painful to watch. (ā ā ā )
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The Little Things: This might have been Jared Letoās most appropriate role. Did he even have to act at all? (ā ā ā )
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WALLā¢E: I donāt think WALLā¢E will ever get old for me. Itās an evergreen film that never fails to move and delight me. (ā ā ā ā ā )
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What If: Or The F Word, I guess? Canāt make the MPAA blush, so I guess the original had to go. I wish I had seen this one when it came out. Mid-20s me would have loved it. (ā ā ā ½)
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Heavy Metal: This film was certainly of its time and clearly made by a bunch of guys. It was more entertaining than I thought it would be, but I doubt Iāll be remembering it too fondly. (ā ā ½)
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Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse: I can’t say enough great things about this, the best animated film of the last decade. It breathes fresh life into the character of Spider-Man, and shows that another adaptation doesn’t have to be tiresome or stale. (ā ā ā ā ā )
-
The Girl with All the Gifts: I’d call this a halfway decent adaptation of a halfway decent novel, although the novel had a slightly better ending. The entire concept is fascinating and has echoes of Richard Mathesonās I Am Legend. (ā ā ā ½)
-
By the Sea: Aside from this one being far longer than it needed to be, I donāt understand why it was received so poorly. My best guess is that it felt like an old French film, appropriate considering its setting, and people just arenāt used to that anymore. (ā ā ā ā )
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6 Underground: I had more fun watching this movie than I had any right to, and I place that honor squarely on Ryan Reynoldsās shoulders. Was the story and the editing great? Nah, but thatās what you should expect when you start a Michael Bay film. This was just a fun way to spend some time. (ā ā ā ½)
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Loving Vincent: A relatively simple story makes way for a truly astonishing work of art. The entire dang thing is done in oil paintings. I was invested and wowed in this film the entire time I was watching it. (ā ā ā ā ½)
- A small stick that can be plugged directly into an HDMI port.
- An Apple TV soundbar, which would combine the best of the Apple TV and the HomePod into a single product.
- A box similar to whatās offered now. This could be for those who want to game on their television, but donāt need or already have a sound system.
-
Donāt get me wrong, thatās a huge plus. ↩︎
I took my dog to the vet today for a much-needed allergy shot and it turns out sheās about seven pounds lighter than the last time I was there to see her get weighed. Sheās still healthy, and is in fact kicking my butt in the weight loss department. š¶
Iāve been thinking a lot about what I believe is a tendency for men to feel compelled to give their opinion on a topic just because itās there. How instead can I bring value to discourse? I worry that my pendulum is swinging too far in the opposite direction: complete silence.
Spending time perusing my liked videos on Vimeo feels like visiting old friends. I happened on an old one showing Milton Glaser drawing and talking. It’s a fascinating watch.
I’m unable to draw like him, but it’s still always nice to hear an expert talk about what they love.
My Year of Understanding
i.
Over the years, I’ve tried my hand at the Theme System. It was conceived by CGP Grey of YouTube fame and Myke Hurley of Relay FM fame. I first heard about it while listening to their Cortex podcast. The goal is to throw off the high-pressure, low-results shackles of annual resolutions and instead embrace, as they say, āan idea of how we would like to approach each year or season.ā
I think it can be a stellar system if itās done the right way. In fact, itās quite hard to do the wrong way, which is nice. Instead of deciding on a single make-or-break goal to complete before the end of the year, you give yourself a guiding principle, or theme, to live by throughout the year. There are no other objectives than to do right by yourself, however that means to you.
Want to live a year of less? Then feel good about cleaning out your closet, buying fewer things, or decreasing the amount of stress you have in your life.
Think a year of gratitude is more up your alley? Be mindful of the things you appreciate and the people in your life.
Or maybe itās even something like a year of elevation. Raise the needy people around you, or heck, climb a few mountains.
Whatever the case may be, try to adhere to these suggestions:
ii.
I tried to live a Year of Growth in 2020. When I came up with the idea, I had my business in mind. I wanted to grow Dandy Cat, garner some attention, and start earning some money. In this way, I did not succeed at living a growth year. The business stagnated,1 and I didnāt grow its audience any larger than it already had been. That was a real disappointment.
Itās taken me a while to understand that a lack of growth in my business doesnāt mean I didnāt live a year of growth. Thatās sort of the beautiful thing about the Theme System. It can be vague. Maybe not too vagueāthere should be some measurable successābut pretty vague. My then-fiancĆ©e/now-wife and I moved in together. I learned a lot about my countryās government.2 I started podcasting with a great friend of mine. If thatās not growth, then I donāt know what is.
Getting over the feeling that I didnāt live up to my hopes for the year is a hard thing to accomplish, though. I did a lot of great stuff, but I didnāt achieve what I was hoping for. Did I fail, though? Ultimately, no, I donāt think soāI did a lot of growing!
Maybe I can consider coming to that realization a moment of growth. Hey, extra theme points coming in out of nowhere. Score!
Iām planning on making this year a different story.
iii.
2021 is my Year of Understanding.
Last year was rough on just about everybody. I wish it could have been a lot better, but that just wasnāt in the cards for us. Instead, weāve gotten a rampaging virus, shaky governments, and insane unemployment rates. Weāve all had to face many tough truths about the world and the people in it. It was a banner year for getting smacked in the face by the cold, indifferent hand of the universe.
2020 also gave us all the opportunity for self-reflection, and I hope you took the time to ask yourself some tough questions. Reflecting on the answers you give can allow you to learn more about yourself.
I tried to take advantage of that tumultuous year to ask myself a few questions. These have been on my mind because theyāre the most important ones I need to answer at this point of my life. Theyāre also damn tough to crack, but Iām going to give them a go. I want to answer those questions because I want to gain a greater understanding of the world and my place in it.
To feel accomplished with my Year of Understanding, Iām going to tackle at least four topics:
Thereās a lot I donāt understand about my life and the world. Usually, Iāll just feel upset that I donāt have any answers. Iāll also feel upset that I let my lack of understanding get to me. Itās a pretty unpleasant cycle.
Instead of just feeling frustrated about my ignorance, itās important to do the harder work of learning about these issues. Gaining understanding without trying to earn it is a rare thing. Itās not worth counting on. Instead, understanding is something that needs to be built, maintained, and allowed to flower.
iv.
My Year of Understanding may end up being a difficult one. Asking yourself tough questions and giving yourself tough answers is a hard thing to do. Most of the time, we donāt ever want to broach these subjects. Theyāre painful. Thereās a fair chance theyāll take the shine off the images we hold of ourselves.
But what good is living in this world, and surrounding yourself with other people, if you donāt try to be better than you were before?
I want to be a better person, and the first step I need to take is understanding myself more than I do now.
Letterboxd DiariesāFebruary 2021
Total movies watched this month: 15.
I really like Letterboxd, and I think you might enjoy it, too. You should sign up for it if you havenāt already. Itās a great and friendly, movie-based social site. If youāre new or old to it, you should definitely give me a follow on there. š„
I’ve just spent a good hour and a half cleaning up my website’s CSS (but I still have a long way to go with that endeavor). I also removed a sneaky bit of HTML font code in my site’s theme that was communicating with Google Analytics. Now it’s all tracker free!
Time for bed. š“
Iāve been a fan of the podcast, Reply All, for a long time, having started listening to the show since nearly their first episode. The quality has always been excellent and many of their stories have stuck with me since listening to them.
But that appreciation was shaken a couple of years ago when Gimlet, the company that produces Reply All, responded to its staffās unionization efforts by, essentially, giving them the middle finger. At the time, I didnāt stop listening to the show because I felt that the union would eventually be recognized. This feels like a mistake now, especially since theyāre still fighting for recognition. I could and should have supported the Gimlet Union in ways other than continuing to subscribe to a Gimlet show. My presence in their podcast analytics would suggest that Gimletās actions are acceptable.
Then this episode popped up into my podcast feed this morning:
Given Gimletās actions, it wasnāt a surprise. Is it much of an apology? Eh, kind of. I appreciate that theyāre taking time to evaluate themselves, but it also sounds like hosts/producers P.J. Vogt and Sruthi Pinnamaneni are just being allowed to lie low until the heat of this story wears off.
I wanted to investigate this further, so I followed the story, being led to a Twitter thread by former Gimlet employee, Eric Eddings. I encourage you to click through and read it all.
Last week I got an email from Sruthi about Reply Allās Test Kitchen series. I had been avoiding listening but once I did I felt gaslit. The truth is RA and specifically PJ and Sruthi contributed to a near identical toxic dynamic at Gimlet. This will be a longer thread, apologies.
ā Eric Eddings (@eeddings) February 16, 2021
This is a moving and frustrating story by someone who was ignored, passed over, and insulted by Gimlet and some members of its staff. Itās sad to know that Eric wasnāt the only one who had to deal with this institutional bullshit at Gimlet.
Iāve since unsubscribed to Reply All. Itās the most meager action I can take, but it is something. If playing a part in hitting them where it hurtsātheir subscriber numbersāis what I can do, then Iāll happily do it. Thereās also this post, which I hope will encourage others to look into the wild power imbalance at Gimlet, understand how their people of color and pro-union employees are treated, and hold Gimlet and its founders, Alex Blumberg and Matthew Lieber, accountable for their abhorrent actions. Throw in Gimletās parent company, Spotify, as well. They certainly donāt appear to be doing anything to help the Gimlet Union. I also encourage you to follow the Gimlet Union on Twitter. Theyāre doing good work.
I enjoyed Reply All, but I canāt continue to support it when its success was built off the backs of the unrecognized and spurned. What I will continue doing is try to learn more about that of which Iām ignorant, such as I was about the toxic culture at Gimlet. And Iāll always appreciate help with that endeavor from people who know more than I do.
After using ConvertKit for way too long, I’ve switched over to Buttondown and I feel great about it. Is it perfect? Nope, but at least I can opt-out of including insidious tracking pixels in all of the emails I send out. ConvertKit all but told me they’ll never give that option.
Whatās the estimate on when Facebook, Twitter, and the like (those that tend now to follow the pack instead of paving the way) implement obviously Clubhouse-type features? Whatās a good unit of measurement in this case? Three āInstagram Storiesā from now?
A huge issue I was having with Ghost was its lack of easy footnoting. The developers haven’t been any help with this issue. Thanks to the plug-ins available on Micro.blog, I can have my footnotes back (and in nice Bigfoot form, too!). Thanks @manton et al. for this.
What I Wouldn't Give for an Apple TV Soundbar
Jason Snell has been talking about wanting an Apple TV soundbar for a few years now, and I want to join in on this chorus.
Iāve had several Apple TV boxes over the years. Even in the face of rising opposition from the likes of Roku, Amazon, and Google, not to mention nearly every smart television sold in the last few years, Iāve held firm on sticking with Appleās overpriced offering. I appreciate the interface, the strong integration with Appleās services, and Iām even okay with the much-derided remote.
These days, there are some massive blind spots that Apple has with this device. Itās lagging hard behind the rest of the competition, and thatās becoming a problem. Itās got me considering if a Roku would make my tv life easier, but I donāt really want to toss my hat into that ring.
I do love the Apple TV, but itās good to be critical of the things you love.
The current Apple TV is way too expensive
Even for Apple, a base price of $179 for a device that hasnāt seen an appreciable update in years is verging on the unconscionable. Iām reminded of the trash can Mac Pro from 2013, which never lost its $3,000 starting price tag, even after several years and the definite news that a newer, better Mac Pro was on the horizon. The thing got older and it stayed the same price. It became an issue for Apple.
The Apple TV is powerful, though, even by todayās standards. Not only can it display 4K content in glorious Dolby Vision high dynamic range, it can also play some fairly demanding Apple Arcade games.
The thing is, most other streaming device or tv manufacturers provide a 4K Dolby Vision capable box. Theyāre also able to do it for, generally, at least half the price of the Apple TV. An equivalent product from Roku is only $99. From Amazon, itās $119 for their cube or $49.99 for their stick. Heck, you can even get something with a suspiciously Apple TV-like interface from Google for $49.99.
Apple isnāt providing a novel product anymore. At this point, what it has to offer is a nice integration with its other services, and thatās not worth a premium.
Half of the Apple TV is pointless if you donāt game on it
Arcade feels half-baked on the TV. By trying to appeal to the broadest set of customers on the widest range of devices, theyāre hindering their ability to make the Apple TV a seductive gaming device. When your competition is Sony, Microsoft, and Nintendo, coming in with a service that distinguishes itself from the rest of its games by, mostly, having no ads1 means that youāre falling short of the competition.
Apple may never pull serious gamers away from their PlayStations, Xboxes, or Switches if they refuse to go all in on their gaming efforts. This means creating blockbuster games that people feel a need to play and including a real controller in the box. Sure, you can connect one from a PlayStation or Xbox if you want to a better experience. However, the Venn diagram of people who own both a dedicated gaming controller and an Apple TV probably isnāt as close to a circle as Apple might hope. Instead, by including just an Apple TV remote in the box, their suggestion is to use that as a controller. Thatās not a terrible experience.
Iāve got a PlayStation, so I do all of my gaming on that device. Itās more enjoyable. I use my Apple TV exclusively for streaming. I donāt want to game on it; Iāll hop onto my iPad if I want to play something from Arcade.
As it stands, I paid for potential thatās not being delivered. $179 was spent on this thing, and Iām using maybe only $79 worth of this device. Iād put the remaining hundred on the bet that Iām not the only one who doesnāt care about gaming on Apple TV.
Give us options
What I want is a different Apple TV, or rather, a few different Apple TVs. Not just storage options. Two, maybe three, different devices:
The stick would be a wonderful option for people who donāt want the sort of audio quality a soundbar can provide. Maybe theyāre living in a smaller apartment or dorm room. They want to watch their content, but space is at a premium. A stick that can plug directly into the back of the tv, provide 4K video, and come in under, say, $60 would be an amazing product.
I currently have an Apple TV outputting its audio to a paired set of HomePods. Itās a wonderful setup, with remarkably few issues. I happily enjoy my movies and tv shows on this every day.
However, itās clear that Appleās intention wasnāt to have people pair their Apple TV with a HomePod. It was introduced as a phenomenal (and very pricey) speaker with which to play your music. Audio can also be streamed from the Apple TV and played on the HomePod. Heck, even Dolby Atmos audio can be played through them. Itās a feature that seems hacked together when Apple finally realized that people were using them as television speakers.
I would love to see what Apple can produce when they create an Apple TV+HomePod experience with greater intention. A soundbar offering could be that device. This could become an essential piece of living room equipment, as necessary as the television itself. When smart TVs are becoming more capable of playing high-quality content by the day, you need that sort of selling point to stay ahead of the competition.
Iād also like to see it stay under $400. Not a bad price when companies like Sonos sell a basic soundbar for $399. That one doesnāt even have Apple TV or Siri integration.
The Apple TV has never really taken off because itās an expensive product aimed at the wrong people. When there are Roku devices that start at $30, pricing it at $179 is a nonstarter for most. They donāt particularly care what the Apple TV offers. They just want to watch The Office and save a few bucks. Theyāre already paying a bundle each month on streaming services. This is where the stick would shine.
On the other hand, many people would love to have a home theater experience that can come close to replicating a theater. An Apple TV soundbar would get us closer to that dream, and weād be willing to pay for it. I would love a single device that can act as an Apple TV, HomePod quality surround sound speaker, HomeKit hub, and maybe even another Siri communicator.
A better lineup would go a long way toward making Apple a contender in the streaming device game again. As it stands now, theyāre letting competitors lap them by seemingly ignoring their device, and I donāt know what the intention is there. Do they actually think itās good enough or are they letting it die a slow death? If theyāre looking at phasing out the Apple TV because itās not selling as well as other players in this market, maybe not selling well isnāt the problem. Maybe itās because the Apple TV isnāt good enough anymore.
UPDATE: Another idea just came to me: I would heartily approve of functionality that made the HomePod minis able to act as surround sound speakers. Beaing able to create a truly immersive setup with the HomePod products would be amazing.
Iām currently reading a book that makes a reference to the mass malathion sprayings that took place in California (and other places) during the ā80s and ā90s. Tons of pesticide was dropped all over California in an effort to combat a Mediterranean fruit fly infestation. I was in elementary school at the time and I recall my schoolās playground had to be covered in plastic sheeting to keep the play surfaces safe.
The whole thing is, in itself, a fascinating story that may have had eco-terrorist ties. Furthermore, the spraying didnāt actually stop the flies; sterilized flies were introduced into the area to help control the population.
It was a remarkable thing. It makes me wonder how well something like that would go over today. I recall it just being an accepted fact of life that pesticide would be dropped all over for a short while.
Now, though? I can just imagine the furor and outrage that would spark up over it. Oh, Facebook and the conspiracy theorists would have such a loud field day over it all!
Going out for a nice, long stroll with my wife was just the thing I needed. This last week felt like a long one. It wasnāt a week where everything was piling on; it just felt never-ending. Fresh air and sunshine are magic. āļø
I just spent the last couple hours restoring my M1 Mac Mini because of a consistent kernel panic issue. I think it may have solved the issue and brought back my great computer. At least, I hope so because that was a lot of work.
I’m working on the show notes for an upcoming episode of More Movies Please! We talked about Terrence Malick’s, A Hidden Life. It’s been a couple weeks since I watched the film, but I still can’t get it out of my mind. Once again, Malick made a beautiful, important film. š„
Iāve been using a quip toothbrush for nearly four years. After getting fed up with the company, I switched to a Sonicare. Wow, the vibrations on that thing are crazy. My teeth had no idea what they were in for. Glistening teeth, here I come!
I’ve got my fingers crossed that getting my car’s battery replaced doesn’t turn into anything bigger and more expensive. There’s always that potential, but hey, maybe this could be one of those fabled cheap visits to the mechanic. š¤
My M1 Mac Mini is a truly wonderful machine. I love every part of it, except for the near daily kernel panics that occur when it goes to sleep. It only ever seems to happen once a day, but it’s still enough to be worrisome and frustrating.
This was unexpected: Arcade Fire and Owen Pallett will finally be releasing the soundtrack to one of my favorite films ever, Her. The movie came out in 2013, so it’s been a long time coming. I’m really looking forward to listening to this official version on March 19. šµ
To wrap up the little dog story, there appeared to be nothing stuck in her nose, but it was red and inflamed inside. Iām hoping she sneezed out what was irritating her and sheās just dealing with some bad irritation.
Fingers crossed that sheāll be feeling better soon. š¤
And now my larger dog is having painful hip issues, which has been an years-long, degenerative problem. I love these furry goofs, but theyāre doling out a lot of stress today.
After two hours of waiting at the vetās office and not really being listened to, Iāve got to take my dog back tomorrow. For the same procedure she needed in the first place.
They thought it was allergies. I know my dog well enough to know itās something stuck up her nose.
My small dog has, apparently, gotten something stuck up her nose. Sheās sneezing and snurfing all over the place. Thereās a vet appointment scheduled for this afternoon, but in the meantime, sheās a sad little pup. š¶

A Sidestep
i.
Unfortunately, this was born out of gloom.
My company, Dandy Cat Design, had been an instructional resource intending to help people design their most productive lives ever. Since very nearly the beginning, itās a blog that I enjoyed working on and sharing with people. Iāll never stop finding it delightful to hear what others think about what Iāve published. Iāve written a fair amount about starting a blog, why I think a blog is just as meaningful as ever, and why itās important to start your own (if writing is something you want to do). I wonāt get into that again here.
Dandy Cat Design has been lots of things since its inception. The business began as a Squarespace website design service. It then became a place for me to sell Squarespace CSS plugins and business building guides. Most recently, it turned into a blog bent toward the topic of productivity.
The whole thing, too, was born out of the gloom I felt after the death of my father in February 2018.
I put more hours than I can count (mostly because I donāt do a good job of tracking my working time) into Dandy Cat Design. Itās been a tool thatās given me a weekly routine, a creative outlet, and many tasks on which to focus. Unfortunately, itās also never really caught on and snowballed into the financially stable business I hoped it would become.
This has been discouraging for me, to say the least.
A couple of years into working on Dandy Cat Design, I discovered an educational course from someone named Melyssa Griffin. Itās called Pinfinite Growth. Its intention is to help you grow awareness of and engagement with your business by flooding Pinterest with images of your blog posts/products/website. Stick with it long enough and you may just have the chance to catch the attention of Pinterestās algorithm. Once you accomplish that, the growth potential can be huge. I started the program because I saw it as a way to bring attention and money to my work. Unfortunately, the only increased engagement I saw with Pinterest was from sharing other peopleās content. My website saw no significant uptick in visitors.
(On a side note, Ms. Griffin recently sent out a notice that sheāll no longer be developing or offering this course. She still believes in the power of Pinterest, but sheās focusing on other aspects of her business. Sheās come to understand that teaching others how to game an uncaring algorithm isnāt quite as important as helping them become better business people, from the inside out.)
The gloom I felt set in soon after seeing a negative turn in my analytics on Pinterest. Results for a course like the one I took are never guaranteedāhow could they be?ābut it was still frustrating to pay for it, follow the recommendations, and not succeed.
I felt aimless and stuck, much like I did in my early 20s when I had no idea what the hell I wanted to do.
ii.
In truth, Dandy Cat Design wasnāt created to be fulfilling in one of those deep down, personal ways. It was created to make money. If I could one day feel personally fulfilled by whatever work I do, then that would just be a cherry on top of my life sundae.
Speaking this way tends to feel blasphemous to certain kinds of creative people who have been told by other creative people that their art should always come before, and sometimes in place of, earning a living.
Art above all else. Righteous fists to the sky, and all.
The thinking is that creativity should be all about The Struggle. Without The Struggle, how will you ever be able to understand the grinding, dismal truth of the worldālife is pain. Without The Struggle, how will you be able to know how to display that truth in your work?
The general feeling is, if youāre having a rough go at it, then good job! Youāre doing art the proper way. Alternatively, If you become successful, then youāre a sell out. Nobody ever mentions that money helps alleviate the need for The Struggle, but then, if everyone had enough money to be comfortable, how could the richest people ever bank more wealth?
Itās a damn shame that artists have let themselves be tricked into thinking their work should be done only for noble reasons, instead of also a paycheck.
I got closer to my 30s than I should have before I realized what a load of harmful nonsense that is. I spent too many years wanting to just create things, and damn the lack of compensation. My art would sustain me!
I wanted to be an actor. No, a cinematographer. No, an illustrator. No, a web designer. No, a… And so on. I leapfrogged from interest to interest without a thought of what I would do to keep from drowning when I finally landed on something at which I had some talent.
Iām supportive of art and its creation, but youāre going to have a hard time creating art if youāre not able to pay for life. The world isnāt really set up, at least not now, to help people who donāt already have some cash in their bank accounts. Life is going to be damn tough if you donāt have at least one eye on the money ball. Money may be the root of all evil, as they say, but itās also the genesis of life, happiness, and freedom.
iii.
I donāt know what will ultimately become of Dandy Cat. Try as I might, Iām still unable to see into the future (which is a shame because Iād really like to win the lottery). Perhaps this place will wither away to nothing in the future. Maybe itāll click with the right people and become the uncontrollable snowball of success I think it should be.
Iāve got my fingers crossed for the second one. That would be really cool.
What I do know is, if Iām intent on wanting to create things right now, I need to do it for good reasons. My driving force with Dandy Cat was to become financially independent doing something I enjoy. Thatās a fine reason to do anything. While I started it in the hopes of making money, there was also a stink of desperation around my actions. Thatās not a good reason to do anything.
Behind every decision Iāve made has been a thick thrum of anxiety. It sounded like this:
āI hope this will all finally work out for me.ā
āI hope this move will let me pay off my student loans before Iām dead.ā
āI really hope getting into Pinterest will help me reach the point where I donāt have to keep depending on other people for money.ā
Basing my decisions off fear instead of level-headed introspection was never going to be a good idea. I usually donāt like the outcome of those choices. Iāve learned that what Iāve done with Dandy Cat up to this point hasnāt helped alleviate my anxiety. In fact, it was growing anxiety, and I was losing interest in the business because of that.
iv.
What can I do to make Dandy Cat healthier for me in the long term? Whatās a good reason to keep this going? Those are probably the most important questions I need to answer.
I recently took some significant time off to relax, think a lot, and figure out what would be best for me. I also got married, but thatās a whole other big topic. During that time off, I learned that Dandy Cat as it had been before my break was not bringing me fulfillment or happiness. In fact, it was beginning to feel like the sort of work that I donāt want to do. If I can create something, then I should make sure itās to my liking.
I realized that what I was writing about and sharingānamely productivity tips and tricksāwere, at best, only bandages applied over a greater issue. I wasnāt discussing why someone would and should want to become more organized and productive. Instead, I was suggesting that cleaning out your junk drawer would totally transform your life. Not only is that untrue, but itās irresponsible. I was following the lead of so many other bloggers out thereāonly discussing tools and not issues. Junk drawers arenāt the underlying problem; the problem is deeper down. Coming to this conclusion helped me reach another one: I like being organized and productive in my life, but I donāt particularly feel like writing about it. Not weekly, anyway.
I feel like I shoehorned the topic of productivity into Dandy Catās stated mission. When I settled on productivity and organization, it was because it felt like a popular topic at the time. Hey, it was working for Marie Kondo, so why couldnāt it work for me? I didnāt choose it because thatās what Iām thinking about all day, every day. Instead, I chose it for superficial reasons and thatās why my enthusiasm for it waned.
Now, I want to do whatās healthier for me, and that means writing about whatever the hell I want to write about. Iām more interested in Apple, technology, movies, tv shows, music, books, podcasts, animals, my life, and yes, sometimes even a cool new task manager app. Iām impressed with and love the work John Gruber does on Daring Fireball, Jason Snell does on Six Colors, and Jason Kottke does on kottke.org. I donāt mean to be a facsimile of them, but I do mean to try to live up to the quality of their work.
Iām at a different place now. I want to know what it feels like to do something for the gosh darn, roll around, throw confetti in the air joy of it. If I want to continue creating things, I need to do it for my enjoyment first. That means figuring out what I really like talking about and publishing that. Itās probably not going to be cleaning tips.
Furthermore, this may mean that Dandy Cat isnāt my only job. Remember, money is still important.
Iām also going to pull the trigger on something I wrote about in a Dandy Newsletter a while back: Dandy Cat Design is now, simply, Dandy Cat. Itās cleaner and now more representative of the topics Iāll be talking about, or rather, wonāt be talking about. The word ādesignā doesnāt fit anymore, so it should go. From now on, you can go to dandy.cat to find my work.
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Writing this has been cathartic. I canāt think of a clearer sign that I should do more of it.
I canāt promise myself that Iāll remain gloom-free forever, but I can turn that feeling into something healing and meaningful. I can try to walk out of the gloom and into the sunlight.
And hey, I didnāt need to eat an enormous carton of ice cream to feel better either.