
Unless commitment is made, there are only promises and hopes; but no plans.
– Peter F. Drucker
Interest is reactive. Commitment is proactive.
When you’re interested in something, you might play around with it, dabble, get a feel for it, see what it can do, poke at it and see how it responds, compile and recompile, uninstall, reinstall, tweak, and spend copious amounts of free time–or copious amounts of work time–debating its good and bad points on internet discussion forums. You can run around for a long time on this treadmill, following your curiosity wherever it takes you.
If you stay interested in something long enough, without making any decisions about how far you want to go with it, you end up with a partial commitment. A partial commitment is like an intellectual fuck buddy: not quite worthy of doing when you’re sober, but a pleasant distraction from internet porn when it’s late at night and you’re drunk.
As a computer geek, I’ve probably lost months of my life doing this kind of thing. I used to spend hours on IRC and mailing lists debating the “best”: the best programming language, the best web framework, the best operating system, the best way to filter and sort email, etc. I became a collector of partial commitments. I could tell you a lot about the various things I’d “dabbled” with, but would shrivel up if you asked me to show you what I’d actually done.
I was, *gasp*, a lurker.
I had a “fear of commitment”. And it sucked.
Commitment is the realm of the doer. It implies making a decision, setting your sights on your destination, and stepping on the gas. When you’re committed to producing a certain result, you begin at the end and reverse engineer a solution that will achieve the desired outcome. You eliminate from your mind any possibility of not getting what you want. Instead of asking, “Is this possible?” you ask, “What must I do to make this happen?”
Curiosity is, of course, a good thing. It’s fun to play around with stuff, explore, break things and put them back together, and take some time to evaluate the alternatives. But at some point, the rubber has to meet the road. The warning sign of a partial commitment is guilt. When you get that sinking feeling that you’ve got better things to do than Aimless Internet Reading (TM) and IRC debate, you probably do.
The End of Lurking
The way to break out of this rut starts with learning to think more independently. Specifically, realize that “best” really means “best for you”. There is no ideal programming language, blog posting frequency, or Supreme Court ruling on the One True Text Editor. The most efficient and effective way to determine what’s best for you is to spend less time discussing and debating the alternatives and more time actually trying them out, and seeing what produces the best results for you.
Output is God.
Another thing to realize is that no matter what path you choose, you’re bound to learn a hell of a lot. A commitment to learning as much as you possibly can combined with the animal-like pursuit of a specific objective is much more important than the specific medium or tools that you use.
Finally, you always have the power of the present moment to change your mind. A commitment to diving head first into learning a new framework, language, publishing tool, or image editing program doesn’t imply lock-in. You’re much better off committing yourself to something 100% and figuring out after two weeks that you don’t really like it rather than being 20% “interested” in it for a few months, and never sinking your teeth in deeply enough to reach a firm conclusion.
So, what are you on the fence about? Ruby or Perl 6? Corporation or partnership? PC or Mac? Red pill or blue pill? Whatever it is, it all comes down to realizing that the answer is subjective, that the only way you’ll ever know is by trying it out yourself instead of relying on borrowed wisdom, and that if things don’t work out, you can always change your mind.
This is a fantastic article. I read it and completely related to it. I have explored many things in the past few years and even made some financial investments to explore them but 9 out 10 times I have lost interest or decided not to further pursue it. The only thing I keep coming back to is programming and have been realising in the past few months that this is what I can see myself doing for the rest of my life.
Hey Ketan,
Thanks, glad you found this helpful. :)
Good stuff.
another great article and very pertinent to where I am in life now.
I’ve been on the cusp of starting a new website for a few months but been putting it off, mostly out of fear, because it’s bigger than anything I’ve done so far.
Time to stop dabbling! Time to commit to it.
Thanks guys.
@Aaron:
I know what you mean. I was on the cusp of starting 30zzz for a long time before I finally took the plunge. It finally reached fruition when I literally just sat down at my computer one day and forced myself to start coding.
Good luck with your idea; looking forward to hearing how it turns out!
I really enjoyed this article. A lot of points brought up feel like good habits to tackle procrastination.
Relationships can in some ways relate to this too.
Ouch.
Always hurts a little when a self-improvement article hits the nail on the head. =)
Thanks for the insight, Brad!
Brad, you know the true answer is Perl 6! :)
FANTASTIC!
I was reading this blog for past 3 days and this one made me leave this comment!!
Keep up this good work!
and
Thanks!!
I feel like you’re talking directly to me. It’s uncanny.
I have a tendency to spend hours and hours and hours reading about something and rarely if ever _doing_ something with it. That’s been a problem for me most of my life.
My latest obsession has been reading blogs (and books) about programming, but not actually…programming! I’ve recently been slashing my list of feeds to the bare essentials. It’s a start…
Bruh, are you sure you’re only 29. I got to tell you your articles are hitting me hard, because it’s like you’re writing to me personally. I’m 35 and the advice you’re giving I wish I would have gotten at 29 or earlier. I spend all my time trying to see what the “experts” got to say that I rob myself of the adventure that goes along with just doing it! Tonight I saw an earlier version of my cv that I nixed, because I had graphic art on it, which I think goes along with the theme of my cv. But I read that graphic art is not acceptable. After re-doing my cv to look like the other cv’s out there i’m going to go back to my original formatted cv! Or I can send out both of them and see which one solicits the fastest response. in ‘08 i’m bucking all the cmmon held beliefs and bring in my own! I am committing to a life of turning what cold be failure into enjoying the “fruits” that a life of committed living gives you!
Must…resist…Yoda quote.
Awesome article Brad! :)
It clarifies what was meant by “do or do not, there is no try”.
[...] beliefs and drink requests. Giving up alcohol must be made priority number one in your life. A partial commitment is a commitment to [...]
Loved the article and SOOOOOOOO True. You definitely have a way with words. Now, does anyone have an idea how I, a mere beginner, can sell my paintings on-line? Speaking of committment…. Thanks for the inspiration -
Enjoyed this blog. Made me think. My interests reads like a jack of all trades, but nothing committed.
It’s comforting to know that there are many others like me out in cyberspace – and I think a good many are in the IT field. We’re part of a new generation that – because of the internet and all the “answers” it provides – spends his life figuring out out to best live life – and never getting around to actually living it. A new generation of cowards, who wants to accumulate all of the answers before we get started. But we’re realizing slowly that it’s not possible. We’ve been afraid of that world out there beyond the computer screen and we even have financial incentive to stay away from it. Keep up the good work.