I am Peter W Knox

I'm going to wish I had written more of this down

address all emails to:
me at [this domain] dot com

meta

About
Favorites
Archive
Random
Mobile
RSS Feed
Screenname
Facebook
Myspace
Twitter

sites

Main
Videos
Profiles
Articles
Disclaimer

stats

search




Posted 4 months ago on March 3 2008


Permalink
pete:
The Advantages of Closing a Few Doors - New York Times
 This is brilliant stuff that most everyone can relate to:

The experiments involved a game that eliminated the excuses we usually have for refusing to let go. In the real world, we can always tell ourselves that it’s good to keep options open. 
You don’t even know how a camera’s burst-mode flash works, but you persuade yourself to pay for the extra feature just in case. You no longer have anything in common with someone who keeps calling you, but you hate to just zap the relationship. 
Your child is exhausted from after-school soccer, ballet and Chinese lessons, but you won’t let her drop the piano lessons. They could come in handy! And who knows? Maybe they will. 

Pay attention and close a few useless doors. It WILL make your life better. Here’s the logic behind the experiment:
“Closing a door on an option is experienced as a loss, and people are willing to pay a price to avoid the emotion of loss,” Dr. Ariely says. In the experiment, the price was easy to measure in lost cash. In life, the costs are less obvious — wasted time, missed opportunities. If you are afraid to drop any project at the office, you pay for it at home.

pete:

The Advantages of Closing a Few Doors - New York Times

 This is brilliant stuff that most everyone can relate to:

The experiments involved a game that eliminated the excuses we usually have for refusing to let go. In the real world, we can always tell ourselves that it’s good to keep options open.

You don’t even know how a camera’s burst-mode flash works, but you persuade yourself to pay for the extra feature just in case. You no longer have anything in common with someone who keeps calling you, but you hate to just zap the relationship.

Your child is exhausted from after-school soccer, ballet and Chinese lessons, but you won’t let her drop the piano lessons. They could come in handy! And who knows? Maybe they will.

Pay attention and close a few useless doors. It WILL make your life better. Here’s the logic behind the experiment:

“Closing a door on an option is experienced as a loss, and people are willing to pay a price to avoid the emotion of loss,” Dr. Ariely says. In the experiment, the price was easy to measure in lost cash. In life, the costs are less obvious — wasted time, missed opportunities. If you are afraid to drop any project at the office, you pay for it at home.


blog comments powered by Disqus

Powered by tumblr. Theme by Scott. Background by Heather Rivers. Content mine.

 Copyright © 2007 - 2008   Peter W. Knox