The Life Hack Misnomer

Posted on 9 May, 2008

28 Comments so far »

  1. Melissa Pierce said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 1:24 pm

    well thought out Clay, impressed with the follow through on your anti hack theme. The real “life Hack” is just fuckin’ living - breathing it in and chewing it up.

  2. Duff said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 1:33 pm

    Hell yea, Clay. Like what Joseph Cambell said: if there’s a path, it isn’t your path!

    “utilities used to synchronize files don’t upgrade your life, they upgrade your computer.”

    I love this. :)

    Keep on deconstructing,
    ~Duff

  3. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 1:34 pm

    @Melissa: Thanks!

    Regarding this:

    The real “life Hack” is just fuckin’ living - breathing it in and chewing it up.

    How DIY of you :-)

  4. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 1:35 pm

    @Duff: Thanks man. Next week I’ll temporarily stop the critiques and actually write some self-development articles (as opposed to these meta-discussions) :-). Glad you stopped by.

  5. Hunter Nuttall said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 1:43 pm

    Wait, I’m confused. The American Dream is having how many Firefox plugins?

  6. Jared Goralnick said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 2:42 pm

    Yeah, meta-discussions is the right word. Show us the money. I sort of agree with you here, but I’m not sure you’re being totally fair.

    I applaud your trying to help us grow sans technological doohickies–that’s your slant and it’s a valid one. I certainly could use a little impetus to making some big life changes that have nothing to do with technology.

    However, it’s a lot easier to change your tools than it is to change your life. And if the tools serve to change your life then they deserve credit for that, and people should in fact be seeking out such tools at least to the extent that they’re effective.

    Now obviously I have a personal stake in this, in that I want to build tools that help people to help themselves. Whether or not a tool that facilitates change can be called a “lifehack” I don’t know. Whether that tool involves technology or not is irrelevant. A sychronization utility is likely not, but what about something that reminds you of a task right before you need to know about it? What about something that vacuums your house while you’re not there? What about a service that notifies you when things are available that you were before seeking out all the time? Maybe they’re not lifehacks (since it’s a made up word) but they do give you more options with how you spend your time, or they free up your time, or they improve your quality of living.

    The tools that have become obvious in their utility are probably the biggest lifehacks…but we wouldn’t label them as such since they’ve been around for so long. Think: microwave or lock. Maybe they don’t leave to self-actualization, but they help us to keep our eye on the ball–that is, the ball that you’re pitching. After all, you’ve talked about outsourcing and VAs and all that other stuff, too. Sometimes a tactical approach IS in order.

    We’re all going to continue to struggle with personal development, with growth, with focus…and to the end that a tool can help us with that, if we’re so inclined to use them, then why not call that a lifehack? Okay okay, I don’t really care what we call it…but let’s just say there’s room for all sorts of personal development and sometimes tools help us get there?

  7. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 2:54 pm

    @Jared; Excellent points as usual. Yeah, when tools help improve our lives then they totally count as lifehacks in my book. In my view, awayfind (http://awayfind.com) is a friggin’ awesome lifehack; it’s also quite obviously an external hack (which I’m all for… don’t know what I’d do without ultra recall or my hipster PDA). It mostly has to do with practical value, and much of this in the eye of the beholder.

    Setting up a tool that frees you from having to check email is most definately a life hack in the sense of hacking life. Creating a DIY camera stand out of a roll of toilet paper, however, probably isn’t a life hack (although it can be a cool hack). There are of course shades of grey.

    Great discussion, and thanks for chiming in.

  8. Maya said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 3:10 pm

    Clay, thanks for the link to awayfind.com, just looking into it and it sounds awesome.

    “The real life hacks (the kinds of hacks that make you happy, save your relationship, and set you free) don’t require technical solutions. They require human solutions.”

    Very well said..if firefox plugins made you happier, I should have been happier long ago. :) (Still, some plugins are indeed amusing and interesting)

  9. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 3:17 pm

    @Maya: It is awesome. I’m a beta user and it’s great.

    You’re totally right, of course, but plugins. I like the one’s that I have. Many of them are useful and save me time :-)

  10. Jared Goralnick said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 3:20 pm

    Thanks, Clay, for the thoughtful response–you do take care of your readers here. I also certainly appreciate the link to AwayFind.com ;-). Maya, I hope it proves helpful to you!

    I’m looking forward to the interview you were Tweeting about next week on Duff’s website–it’ll be great to learn “what’s next” for the anti-hack man : ).

  11. Clay Collins said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 3:32 pm

    The sad part is that I actually have a crush on Gina Trapani and I probably just runied all chances (unless she’s married, in which case I was already SOL).

  12. Tom Stine | Living from Consciousness said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 6:28 pm

    Nicely said. I would say that spirituality, then, is the ultimate anti-hack. As you said, Clay: “The real life hacks (the kinds of hacks that make you happy, save your relationship, and set you free) don’t require technical solutions. They require human solutions.” All of these are areas that spirituality addresses if it is worth its salt.

  13. Daniel Richard | Winning Everyone said,

    Wrote on May 9, 2008 @ 9:20 pm

    Looks like we are living in a generation where we are going to say “I need a hack!” in replacement of “I need a miracle!” :)

  14. @Stephen | Productivity in Context said,

    Wrote on May 10, 2008 @ 7:30 am

    “real life hacks…require human solutions” Killah line. You are absolutely correct. Wendy Piersall had a great line last weekend about “there is no more time, give me more you”. That is a distillation of what the purpose of the “lifehack” should be.

    Hacking your life, your human self, should be for the purpose of becoming more human, more accessible, more connected.

    BTW, I suspect the cowboy boots did more to your geek cred than this post;)

  15. scott gray said,

    Wrote on May 10, 2008 @ 1:39 pm

    you mean the toilet paper roll camera holder thing has already been thought of?

    man, i’m bummed…

  16. Khürt Williams said,

    Wrote on May 10, 2008 @ 3:37 pm

    Wow! This is an incredible post. I love the way you link hacking to the art of living. Brilliant!

  17. The Life Hack Misnomer « Island in the Net said,

    Wrote on May 10, 2008 @ 3:42 pm

    […] The Growing Life-The Life Hack Misnomer.) Tagged with: life « AirTunes […]

  18. d_man said,

    Wrote on May 10, 2008 @ 5:21 pm

    The anti-hack concept is beautiful, I love it.
    I’ll be back for more…

  19. Michael Martine | Remarkablogger said,

    Wrote on May 10, 2008 @ 9:33 pm

    Wisdom is quite the anti-hack, too. As something of a Taoist, I love this stuff. I see a book deal in your future, my friend. Y’all heard it here first.

  20. Duff said,

    Wrote on May 10, 2008 @ 11:02 pm

    Man, real dialogue in blog comments. What kind of monster are you creating, Clay? :)

    And Clay, dude, AwayFind.com? You have lost geek cred. You’ve got to learn to pwn your inbox or it will pwn you. haha

    ~Duff

  21. J.D. Meier said,

    Wrote on May 10, 2008 @ 11:17 pm

    While life’s not a specatator’s sport and nothing beats first-hand experience, I wish I had a simpler way to give my niece/nephew some basic scaffolding for life. Otherwise, it’s like starting from scratch. During monkey-see, monkey-do age, I’ve see bad things happen to good people and I know a little knowledge goes a long way.

  22. Liara Covert said,

    Wrote on May 11, 2008 @ 4:11 am

    Timely comment. I wonder if you have heard of the film, “Untraceable?”

  23. The Financial Philosopher said,

    Wrote on May 12, 2008 @ 6:56 am

    Clay,

    I like how you say, “Anti-hacks respect the notion that in the game of life, there are often no tricks or shortcuts.”

    This wisdom is a modern version of something said over 2500 years ago: “Nature does not hurry, yet everything is accomplished.” ~Lao Tzu

    While the word, “hack,” is reaching an annoying level of trendiness, I believe it, essentially, is a metaphor for the “primitive brain” or what many neuroscientists have affectionately labeled as “the rat brain.”

    The rat brain consists of “hard-wiring” geared for simple, survival-oriented pattern recognition and it seeks mental shortcuts that link patterns to potential rewards, much like a lab rat that learns the shortest route to a block of cheese. These shortcuts and patterns were quite effective in aiding primitive man to find food and flee danger but arguably are counter-productive in modern man’s short-term physical-world rewards, such as more money, a bigger house and greater social status.

    The problem with “hacking” is that it absolutely perpetuates this human need to find shortcuts. What is worse is that these shortcuts are often false rewards that are nothing more than short-term happiness. We soon set our sights on the next reward.

    As for Jared’s comment, the hacks that technology may bring us will only be positive if they help free more time to find meaning in our lives, not to fill that time with more false pursuits…

    I believe it was one of your previous posts that pointed out that technology has given us the capacity to be at least double our productivity in recent decades but are we twice as happy as we were 50 years ago?

  24. K.T. Stevenson said,

    Wrote on May 12, 2008 @ 10:36 am

    Anti-Hacking Your Life…

    I’m a geek, and like all good geeks, I love new shiny gadgets. I like creative and unexpected uses of technology. I like things that pander to my short attention span, distract me just long enough to wreck my train of thought, and then fade awa…

  25. Jay - Ready, Set, Change! said,

    Wrote on May 12, 2008 @ 3:42 pm

    Even if there were a singular, all-inclusive hack to better living, I’m not sure how excited I’d be about shortcutting my way there.

  26. Brice said,

    Wrote on May 12, 2008 @ 6:51 pm

    I agree, real life problems that most individuals face generally do not require technical solutions. I find it absurd the number of people who look toward technology and wind up over-complicating their lives. People are obsessed with gadgets, not so much to solve problems but to consume interesting things.

  27. chris said,

    Wrote on May 12, 2008 @ 9:34 pm

    Life Hacks, Parenting Hacks, Relationship Hacks, GTD, ZTD, Self-help book, DYI, etc…I wonder what people from other “less advanced” or “less prosperous” countries would say that amidst all our advancements the one thing we can’t seem to improve is our own lives. Meanwhile we look to everyone and everything for guidance when all we really need to do is listen to our own voice and conscience and follow through. We already have the answers, we just don’t want to recognize it.

  28. Michael Moniz said,

    Wrote on May 14, 2008 @ 11:00 pm

    Everyone needs to be reminded that they can make changes to their lives. We forget sometimes or even up that power and blame others instead of taking responsibility.

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