The Universal Truths
I'm still in the preparatory writing phase. That is to say, I'm not sitting down to write chapters, I'm writing about writing.
As I close-read and marked up the shit out of my own book last summer, I started pulling out what I called Universal Truths. These are the core little grains of wisdom that underpin the entire thing… The kinds of things that could become a mantra, a t-shirt, or even the subtitle of a book. Sometimes they were just a throwaway line. Sometimes I never fully expressed them. Such is the nature of first versions.
They emerged naturally when I wrote the book — which I did at a furious pace — but in v2, I'm going to sprinkle them throughout with intention.
I've gathered them all together, now, though, and here they are.
NB: This list is a work in progress. It's messy. It's not in order. It's incomplete. It's too long. It's repetitive sometimes.
And all that is right on target! Every Version Better. I will let them simmer and then I'll Cut Without Remorse.
Universal Truths
- As long as there’s been stuff to do, humans have procrastinated.
- If it's stuck on your hard drive, it doesn’t exist.
- JFS is a muscle, not a talent or a personality trait.
- Winners pay attention to their own pain points.
- The “natural” way to work is often wrong.
- Context is king.
- Resistance is for a reason.
- Right tool, right process, right result.
- Guilt won’t get it done.
- Goodies won’t get it done.
- "Don't should on yourself"
- Carrots, sticks, and tricks don't stack bricks.
- Learn to trust yourself, and the rest is easy.
- Satisfaction is the best motivator in the moment.
- Love is the best motivator long term.
- Tiny wins drive big wins.
- “Pressure” is a warning light, not fuel.
- If you can plan a dinner party, you can ship your project.
- You don’t need perfect, you need progress.
- Everything is iterable. Nothing is done.
- A great project both starts and ends with people.
- Nothing is for everyone.
- Use is value. ^
- Deadlines are a tool to help you get what you want.
- Limits create clarity.
- Focus is a container, deadlines are a frame.
- Infinite choice is not your friend.
- Make it crispy. Make it clear.
- A clear picture makes an easy target.
- As you move forward, keep thinking about going backwards.
- Working in stages makes big projects possible and small projects easy.
- Nobody likes a mystery casserole. Get crispy.
- Know when you’re done, and you’re halfway there.
- Over-ambition is a form of self-sabotage.
- Start small. You can always go bigger.
- Divide your exposure to risk. Multiply your chance of success.
- Finishing things gives you more energy to finish things.
- Atoms are the smallest fundamental unit of work.
- You’ve got enough to do already.
- You Ain’t Gonna Need It.
- “Little details” are their own projects.
- The riskiest time is before you ship.
- More projects have died on the vine than ever shipped and failed.
- No one will know what you you know (about your omissions, etc).
- Great projects grow over time.
- A mistake isn’t a failure, it’s a lesson.
- “Failure” isn’t a permanent state, it’s an opinion.
- Don’t judge your first draft by someone else’s finished result.
- You can’t chew with someone else’s teeth. Chew your own food.
- Learn from recipes.
- Borrow, don’t steal.
- You choose your difficulty setting.
- The fewer moving parts, the better.
- Take on risk intentionally, or not at all.
- The less you have to pause and think, the more you can do.
- Procrastination is a sign to clarify and simplify.
- Something will always go wrong.
- Half a project, not a half-assed project. (who said this?)
- No plan survives contact with reality.
- You will have to cut something.
- Make your hard decisions in advance.
- Drop it like it’s hot, and move on.
- Feelings are a decent feedback mechanism, and a really shitty driver.
- If it’s gonna rain anyway, might as well use it to water your garden.
- Feedback is a gift.
- Prepare for the worst.
- When your roast is ruined, order a pizza.
- You can’t build a reputation and never risk it.
- The longer you wait for more, the less you’ll ever get.
- Your next launch.
- Practice doesn’t make perfect, practice makes permanent. — Kathy Sierra
- It’s tough to be creative while you’re struggling.
- To become a JFSer, you’ve got to get comfortable with being at 80% done, forever.
- Reap the rewards of progress along the way.
- “I forgive myself, now I can study.”
Did any of them particularly resonate with you?
Do you remember taking away a truth when you read JFS v1?
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