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Everyday Systems Podcast
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Everyday Systems Podcast

Author: Reinhard Engels

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Simple, commonsense self-improvement systems
85 Episodes
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Urban Ranger, from scratch, as if I’d never spoken or written about it before. Draft chapter for the upcoming Everyday Systems Compendium, and hopefully interesting and useful in its own right.
Cure all your ailments with dirt, pain and danger
The No S Diet, from scratch, as if I’d never spoken or written about it before. Draft chapter for the upcoming Everyday Systems Compendium, and hopefully interesting and useful in its own right.
Build habits by leaning on the clock and calendar rather than fighting against them. Beyond N and S days. Cutesy task phrases. Powerfully silly times. Calendar-First Tasking.
Annual update on all the Everyday Systems and how they are doing for me personally 
I think I mix about 14 metaphors in this episode:  We’ve got a goose-stepping white bear baseball player with devil horns doing jiu jitsu on the death star. A ridiculous Chimera, if you put it all together. But maybe just the guardian-gargoyle image you need to keep the antimantras at bay.
Self-saboteur? Time to stop playing with your pet demons (maybe).
Anxious? Here's a fun technique for getting over it. It's halfway between gamified mindfulness and exposure therapy.
Aristotle: "You are what you repeatedly do." Well, what do you repeatedly do? In this episode, an exercise for finding out.
Practice being human with AI
Everyday Systems as Apps for Human Minds.
Four catchphrases for tidier habits
A lighthearted approach to imposter syndrome.
A little later and much shorter than last year.
A two-word anti-mantra to snap you and your family out of automatic bickering
Food logging: apparently it works. But it's torture to do long term. I discuss a way you can practice a limited, strategic, surgical form of food logging with the No S Diet (or any other diet) that gives you the benefits of food logging – which are real, potentially at least – without the protracted and probably futile misery.  
After 20 years of swinging my sledgehammer injury-free, I discovered that that even Shovelglove can cause or at least be impacted by injury. How Shovelglove principles like "schedulalistically insignificant time "and "maintenance is more important that progress" have been key to my recovery.
Be a Mensch, not a rockstar. It's surprisingly hard, even though you probably don't have any alternative.
What to do when your appetites keep routing around your rules to contain them
Technology for habits, and habits for technology. Also a story about my Roomba.
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