Reviews

Nooit meer te druk by Tony Crabbe

ijsselmeer13's review against another edition

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2.0

Busy, by Tony Crabbe, is a guidebook to 'how to thrive in a world of too much.' Divided into manageable chapters with lots of headers and a summary and 'go do' section at the end of each chapter, Busy was a super digestible, smooth read. Despite of this format, I was very frustrated by how Crabbe never stops to consider WHY we are so busy, or what busy-ness, productivity, and thriving are defined as. Instead, these concepts are glossed over, as he sprinkles in life or death anecdotes that serve as whiplash-inducing metaphors for office life.

It is my belief that one cannot push back against the busy lifestyle we're so often trapped into if we don't critically think about what that even means. Due to this, it felt as though the instructions did not directly challenge a life of being busy. Rather, Crabbe's suggestions fit a very specific white-collar lifestyle, with tips such as "watch the clock," "kill a meeting," and "...and smile" that ignore the fact that busy might not be a choice, but rather a necessary way of survival.

nadieh_kamp's review

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informative reflective medium-paced

2.0

ryangoodyear's review against another edition

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4.0

This book attacks the modern status-quo need for busyness, especially aiming at those who take pride in being busy and fool themselves into thinking that their busyness is a fruitful approach.

The first 1/3rd resonated with me with its focused message that I haven't read elsewhere. The middle 1/3rd descended at times into rehashing material that has been more thoroughly explored in other contemporary Pop-Sci books. Not the author's fault that I've read those books--I'm just personally burnt out on references to "Thinking Fast And Slow." The last 1/3rd was as good as the first 1/3rd.

The author does a B+ job at avoiding the maddeningly-popular stylistic trope of using his experience in writing the book as a circular argument to prove or discuss the book's subject material.

My gems:

--“We trust [our friends] to deal with the scraps of us: serving them only what’s left of us after we’ve spent all our energy, creativity, and focus in dopamine-fueled activity binges.”

--“Busy is the easy option. We are busy because we don’t make the tough choices. We allow the world and our inbox to set our agenda rather than think for ourselves.”

--“In being busy we get to feel productive while procrastinating”

--“Busy is aspirational. So even if we try to make it sound like a moan, we are building our brand.”

--"When everyone is so overwhelmed, the biggest scarcity is attention.”

--"The opposite of busy in today’s world is sustained, focused attention.”

--“If I asked you why you are busy, you would be able to give all kinds of rational explanations. You might describe the state of the economy or the fact that your business is short on staff at present, you might describe a demanding manager or a demanding project, or you might explain your commitment to the children’s extracurricular activities. The point is, you will have a justification for your busyness. You will have a story you tell yourself and others. All I ask from you at present is to accept the possibility that some of your busyness has come from dumb, irrational and mindless choices.”

--“There is a huge difference between deep focus on an important activity and hopscotching busyness.”

--"A small amount of dopamine is released when we switch, helping us feel potent, effective, and efficient. The more we bounce between [things], the more effective we feel. As the velocity of the demands increase, so does our dopamine. We have to learn not to mistake the buzz we get from multitasking for a rightly earned sense of effectiveness. This buzz perpetuates our illusion of efficiency; we delude ourselves into mistaking our ability to machine-gun disconnected tasks for working well.”

“...rather than do the big work that will make a difference, we turn on the email and pass the time.”

--Horizon One work is day-to-day busy work. Adrenaline-fueled payoff. Horizon Two work yields change after 3-6 month of concrete initiatives and is very important to spend our time here. Horizon Three has emotional appeal of long-term dreams

--"Before starting a work day, we are cold, rational, and have emotional distance. Small and urgent interruptions send us spiraling away from our main purpose.”

--"Overinvest your time and attention in your 15 [closest people]...any increase in the quality of these relationships will be a direct increase in your overall life satisfaction.”

--“...[you will be] shocked by how quickly a child will drag you into joy if you don’t pause them.” Being present around children is not as hard as it may seem, as their requests are 'kid-sized' rather than 'adult-sized'

--“Busyness quiets and dulls the mind.”

--"impact bias” - we massively overestimate the impact things will have on us, and the duration of that impact

--“Materialism steps into the breach when we haven’t worked out what our values are”

--"Busyness is a gentle poison whose effects will be seen, not in a year, but over a decade as the telltale cancers take hold.”

--unhealthy triangle of busyness leads to disconnect and then filling resulting feelings of emptiness with more busyness

--"We enjoy things more when we commit and stop keeping our options open.”

--Dead time is important to synthesize new ideas into your own.

--"Manage your attention instead of your time."

spiritismus's review

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2.0

Mijn verwachting bij het lezen van dit boek is dat ik meer psychologische inzichten zou krijgen in waarom ik altijd druk moet zijn, en manieren om dit te veranderen. Wellicht aangevuld met tips voor ontspanning. Enerzijds kreeg ik hier wel een vleugje van mee, anderzijds ging 80% van dit boek over werk en bedrijfsleven gerelateerde problemen. Een tenenkrommend lang gedeelte gaat over het opbouwen van je ‘merk’ en je onderscheiden op de arbeidsmarkt. Saai en totaal niet relevant! De nadruk lag voor mij dus op totaal het verkeerde aspect. Wat een gemiste kans. Overigens is het boek markttechnisch goed uitgebracht: nergens kan je aan ontdekken dat het een carrièregericht boek is, en naast mij zijn vele anderen hier ingestonken. Daarnaast heeft het boek een origineel en creatief uiterlijk wat je uitnodigt om het op te pakken en te lezen. Slim gedaan!

hypz's review against another edition

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4.0

Great collection of physology research-based strategies relating to dealing with busyness (and modern life in general), from which you can pick and choose what you want to try and find what would work for you.

james_perkins's review against another edition

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informative inspiring medium-paced

4.5

kdaddy's review against another edition

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5.0

(Audible) An excellent read to start the new year. Already made some minor tweaks to my routines and approach to be day and it feels great.

Definitely would recommend.

kevinhendricks's review against another edition

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3.0

Some really interesting ideas and practical tools to better approach and overcome busyness.

the_heart_is_a_muscle's review against another edition

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3.0

I did it! This was one of those many books which get shelved 2/3 of the way in because I get distracted/am not in the mood for it and which I only complete months later. Sorry books, it's nothing personal.

Anyway, this was pretty good, even though I wasn't really the target audience. Sometimes the personal experiences and the practical approach got a bit 'yeah yeah I get it', but overall there was some pretty useful stuff in there and I appreciated the fact that the writer treated you as a thinking adult throughout, often providing you with some good questions to ask yourself instead of trying to feed you 'one size fits all' answers.

davidgilani's review against another edition

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4.0

I really needed this book at the time that I read it. At some points it’s guilty of a little bit of management speak, but it manages to avoid that the vast majority of the time.

Some things that I’m definitely taking forward and overall a mantra that I think many people could benefit from considering.