Derek Sivers spent four years writing How to Live. The book contains everything he’s ever learned. His first draft was over 1,000 pages. Then, he edited them down to 113. The result is a masterpiece that’s widely regarded as Derek’s magnum opus.
This post started as a piece about deliberate entertainment. About shifting your mindset from “What’s on TV?” to “I can watch whatever I want, whenever I want, without ads. I just need to know where to look.” But the idea became too big in my head. So I deleted it all, started from scratch, and here we are.
I wish we could see what’s no longer there. A sort of hologram surrounding whatever we’re looking at. “Oh, this used to be ten times the size! So much marble! So much to chisel away for the artist.”
Adding is easy, subtracting is hard. You can only see what’s in front of you, but if you try, you can imagine so much more—including the long, stony journey it took to get there. Learn to appreciate not just what remains but what has been removed. Ask not only “How much had to be done?” Be sure to also ask “How much had to be deleted?”