The Universal Truths

The Universal Truths

3 min read
First read, then take notes, then gather your notes, then write all your notes down, then slice and dice as the patterns reveal themselves…

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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