SXSW

I am back from 6 days at SXSW Interactive in Austin, TX.  I led a workshop then attended presentations and panels on a wide range of topics. Being there is the ultimate in complex reality.  Between the overwhelming crowds and choices; the sheer logistics of eating, drinking, transporting, sleeping, and the intense focus of meeting, talking, learning, teaching, communicating, and remembering it all, it was anything but simple. 

 

simplicity is less thoughts, not less thinking.

 

The Simplicity of Thinking Now

The only way I could keep it simple was to be focused on what was in front of me.  Whether it was a person I was meeting for the first time, a slide on a screen, a lecturer, or a transportation moment, paying attention to that alone allowed it to stay as simple as it could be at the moment.

The Complexity of Thinking Not Now

Yes, I was multitasking. for example, I wanted to tweet (find me at @thenapkindad) what was being said but I also wanted to take notes. My solution? My tweets became my notes.  When I got in trouble was when I thought ahead instead of stayed with what I was doing.  For example,  leaving my hotel in the morning.  I never forgot my badge, thank God, but I did forget my water bottles one day. Doesn’t seem like a big deal, but when water is 3.25 a bottle? It’s a big deal.  I forgot my schedule booklet one day and had to go over to registration (a long way in a big convention center) to get a new one, one not marked up with all my notes.  I had left mine in the hotel bathroom when I went back in to make sure I was empty before starting my day. Twice while at the conference I left a water or coffee behind that cost way too much to leave behind.  Yes, I went back and got them each time and it added frazzlement to my day.

Less Thoughts, More Thinking

All this made me think about Simplicity. I realized I didn’t need to think less, I needed to have less thoughts.  When I limited the amount of thoughts or was able to unify those thoughts into a clear thread of thinking, then I was successful in getting the most out of my time and efforts. That’s simple enough, right?

Check out the rest of the Simplicity Series here. 

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Drawing, quote and commentary by Marty Coleman

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