Grow

TIME TRAVEL FORWARD | Advice for Future Todd

“If you could go back in time, what would you tell your 20-year-old self?” is a fun self-reflection question. At the heart of the question is what do you know now, that you wish you knew then?

While backwards time travel isn’t currently available, forwards time travel is. I can communicate with Todd 20 years in the future. The 43 folder Tickler system was a tool I valued early in my career for talking to future Todd. It helped me remember key information I needed anytime from tomorrow up to a year away. Then the Franklin Covey planner showed me a similar “note to future self” system.

I even used that methodology at home. One year after spending more time than I needed to string and restringing Christmas lights down the banister, I created a just-in-time Christmas light job aid. I wrote myself a note with a hand-drawn diagram and placed it in the storage box with the lights. When I opened the box the next year, I had instructions from last year that saved me a ton of time.

Giving blood last week, I learned a few tips that I want to share with future Todd that will make his next donation appointment faster. The Community Blood Center was the busiest I’d seen it. Everyone working was hustling, but I had been there 45 minutes and I still didn’t have a needle in my arm.

The double red blood cell process usually takes 45-60 minutes, and I was getting close to my hard stop. When I checked with my phlebotomist, he said not a problem. I’ll get you out of here on time.

Him: Have you donated on this machine before?

Me: I don’t think so, I’m usually on one of the machines over there.

Him: This one is a little different. Down there it does many pulls and returns. This one does 3 bigger pulls and returns, so you might feel more of a difference.

Me: Does that make this machine faster than the other? Him: Yes. In this machine, I input your height, weight, and hemoglobin, and it calculates how much to pull each time.

After 27 minutes, it’s time for the needle to come out.

Me: So how do I make sure I get one of these machines next time.

Him: It’s called the ALYX.

Me: I’m not sure how I can remember that.

Him: You could ask for the blue machine, or the faster machine.

Me: The other thing I noticed was it was fairly busy when I came. When are the slowest times?

Him: Day of the week is tough to predict. But time of day makes a big difference. The plasma appointments are every 2.5 hours. We open at 8, so 8, 10:30, 1, and 3:30 we often get a huge influx of 8 plasma donors.

Me: Thanks!

Excellent! I now know 2 insider tips that will speed up my next donation:

  1. Ask for the ALYX
  2. Schedule at an off time to the plasma times

I’m eligible to donate again after 112 days. How can I share these insights with future Todd to schedule my next donation more effectively.

My first thought is to send myself an email using the reminders feature in a service I use called sanebox.com. I can send an email to any date or time in the future and sanebox sends me the email at that time. It’s a great way to talk to future Todd.

But I decided to try something more direct. I went to the Community Blood Center website and scheduled my next appointment (for 9 am). When I added the appointment on my calendar, I added a note to ask for the ALYX. Of course, I already need to reschedule that appointment.

I’m looking for more ways to keep in contact with future Todd. He’s much nicer than past Todd who I rarely hear from.

Plumber's Block | Examples of overcoming resistance

“Plumbers don’t have plumber’s block” says Seth Godin when he’s talking about writer’s block. His point isn’t that plumbers don’t have obstacles or resistance as Steven Pressfield calls it. It’s that many writers stop writing when they experience it, and plumbers work through it and overcome their blocks.

This spring, I experienced plumber’s block twice. Honestly, I’m a far better writer than I am a plumber, but I’m dangerously fearless in DIY projects.

Plumber’s Block #1. I replaced the shower head on a shower that hadn’t been used in years. With everything connected, I turned the water back on, but there was not water. I thought it must be the diverter, so I changed that. Still no water. Out of ideas, I called in the professionals. Turns out, the new shower head was defective. Professional experience helped me overcome this block.

Plumber’s Block #2. I replaced the washers and springs in a single handle faucet. I couldn’t get the screw that holds the handle in place to thread correctly. I lost my temper. I was convince I had stripped the threads. This time, I took a break. I needed time to cool down and think. I thought to clean the threads with some WD40 and Q-Tip. Worked like a charm.

Blocks happen everywhere. Not having running water in these two circumstances was not an option. Many times, writing is optional. Want to work through writer’s block, make not writing not an option.

The Unintended Consequences of Space Debris

An Australian sheep farmer discovered a piece of space junk in his paddock. The 3-meter hunk of metal is believed to be part of a jettisoned trunk from the SpaceX Dragon spacecraft.

SpaceX is sending a team to evaluate the situation and determine how best to remove it. The jettisoned trunk was intended to burn up in the atmosphere, or at least land in the ocean.

The SpaceX spokesman said, “You have an expected path of where things may come down and this particular debris was within that analyzed space.”

How does this mindset apply to other untended consequences for our debris?

  • Do we analyze the space where the debris for our actions might land?
  • How do we determine what is an acceptable path for that debris?
  • Do we follow up when our debris lands in unintended spaces and offer to clean it up?

When we’re on the receiving end of unintended debris, how do we deal with it? Isn’t acceptable debris just littering we can live with? In the hiking world, the motto is “leave no trace.” If you carried it in, you carry it out (including human waste). No the case in space. More than 27,000 pieces of space junk are tracked by the Department of Defense’s global Space Surveillance Network.

What emotional debris from other people are you still tracking? Can you ask them to clean it up? Can you let it go?