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---
title: "Dispatch #11 (January 2024)"
date: 2024-01-10T22:30:00-05:00
draft: false
tags:
- dispatch
references:
- title: "Organization Office - Christopher Butler ☼"
url: https://www.chrbutler.com/organization-office
date: 2024-01-10T19:08:51Z
file: www-chrbutler-com-294dnz.txt
- title: "Analog Office - The Life-Changing Magic of Keeping a File Index"
url: https://analogoffice.net/2023/05/31/the-lifechanging-magic.html
date: 2024-01-10T19:09:00Z
file: analogoffice-net-xmnih2.txt
- title: "Tech Independence | Derek Sivers"
url: https://sive.rs/ti
date: 2024-01-11T03:31:06Z
file: sive-rs-ssi9lg.txt
- title: "Jack Baty | Ending my OpenBSD experiment (Almost)"
url: https://baty.net/2024/01/ending-my-openbsd-experiment
date: 2024-01-11T03:33:13Z
file: baty-net-bplhdp.txt
- title: "Only you can give meaning to your career: How to mark moments that matter by planting a flag"
url: https://blog.testdouble.com/posts/2024-01-02-plant-your-flag-career-advice/
date: 2024-01-11T03:35:08Z
file: blog-testdouble-com-g9g5id.txt
- title: "Resources on the Philosophy of Work | Vlad's Website"
url: https://vladh.net/wage-labour-resources/
date: 2024-01-11T03:41:42Z
file: vladh-net-lmumqo.txt
- title: "Favorites of December 2023 | Brain Baking"
url: https://brainbaking.com/post/2024/01/december-2023/
date: 2024-01-11T03:44:05Z
file: brainbaking-com-wbhgjj.txt
---
That's a wrap on 2023. Our little Nevie turned two in December. It's hard to imagine her changing as much in the next year as she did in the last, but I suppose it's inevitable. We spent Christmas at Claire's folks' house and hit up both the [Greensboro Children's Museum][1] and [Greensboro Science Center][2].
[1]: https://mbcmuseum.com/
[2]: https://www.visitgreensboronc.com/things-to-do/attractions/the-rotary-club-of-greensboro-carousel.aspx
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We're on a bit of a purge, trying to free up some space in the house. It's an overwhelming project (how did we acquire so much stuff?) but we're taking it one step at a time. I've been building new shelves and put up [guitar hangers][3] to clear up some floor space. I've taken inspiration from [this post about office organization][4] and [this one about maintaining a list of where to find things][5].
[3]: https://www.amazon.com/dp/B08V55KDRG
[4]: https://www.chrbutler.com/organization-office
[5]: https://analogoffice.net/2023/05/31/the-lifechanging-magic.html
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Music-wise, I received an [Arturia KeyStep 37][6] as a Christmas gift from my in-laws. This thing is super nice; I'm already having a blast using it to play my existing gear, and I'm hoping it'll play a big role as I shift to a more computer-based workflow. Here's a new track called "Orographic":
<audio controls src="/journal/dispatch-11-january-2024/Orographic.mp3"></audio>
[6]: https://www.arturia.com/products/hybrid-synths/keystep-37/overview
I dusted off the Switch to play [Dead Cells][7]. It's similar to [Hades][8] but in a more retro side-scrolling format. Highly recommended if you don't mind dying a lot. We also finished season three of [_Slow Horses_][9], the best thing going on television these days.
[7]: https://www.nintendo.com/us/store/products/dead-cells-switch/
[8]: https://www.nintendo.com/us/store/products/hades-switch/
[9]: https://tv.apple.com/us/show/slow-horses/umc.cmc.2szz3fdt71tl1ulnbp8utgq5o
Finally, I'll leave you with this passage from [_4000 Weeks_][10] that I reflect upon often:
> In his play _The Coast of Utopia_, Tom Stoppard puts an intensified version of this sentiment into the mouth of the nineteenth-century Russian philosopher Alexander Herzen, as he struggles to come to terms with the death of his son, who has drowned in a shipwreck -- and whose life, Herzen insists, was no less valuable for never coming to fruition in adult accomplishments. "Because children grow up, we think a child's purpose is to grow up," Herzen says. "**But a child's purpose is to be a child.** Nature doesn't disdain what only lives for a day. It pours the whole of itself into each moment ... Life's bounty is in its flow. Later is too late."
[10]: https://bookshop.org/p/books/four-thousand-weeks-time-management-for-mortals-oliver-burkeman/18140090
This month:
* Adventure: spending MLK weekend with my folks in a cabin the Shenandoah Valley, take Nev to [Luray Caverns][11]
* Project: music/hobby table -- **no new gear** until I have a place I can actually use the stuff I have (then probably a [Roland Juno][12] as a reward)
* Skill: I'd like to learn the pentatonic/blues scale (major and minor) in every key, as it seems to be the basis of most improvisational music I like (that's obviously more than I can do in the next 21 days but at least get started)
[11]: https://luraycaverns.com/
[12]: https://www.roland.com/us/products/ju-06a/
Reading:
* Fiction: [_Revenge: Eleven Dark Tales_][13], Yogo Ogawa -- I'm trying to read better books this year, and this caught my attention when I saw it mentioned on [Hacker Stations][14]
* Non-fiction: [_Essentialism_][15], Greg McKeown
[13]: https://bookshop.org/p/books/revenge-eleven-dark-tales-yoko-ogawa/8623565
[14]: https://hackerstations.com/setups/kasia/
[15]: https://bookshop.org/p/books/essentialism-the-disciplined-pursuit-of-less-greg-mckeown/9404336
Links:
* [Tech Independence][16] ([via][17])
> So if a company turns evil or goes out of business, no problem! You can set up a new server anywhere else in an hour, point your domain name to the new IP address, and its done. **Thats tech independence** -- never dependent on any particular provider or software. Its very empowering. The instructions below will show you how.
* [Only you can give meaning to your career: How to mark moments that matter by planting a flag][18]
> But heres the thing: I create these things for me and me alone. When a bunch of people read something I wrote or show up to one of my talks, do I find it encouraging and validating? Sure. But its not what drives me. I started creating things to punctuate my lifes sentences long before anybody took an interest in me and I wouldnt stop even if everyone loses interest in me.
* [Resources on the Philosophy of Work][19] ([via][20])
> Indeed, we know that it is possible to be creative without being oppressed. Most people can contrast alienated wage labour (what some simply sweepingly call “work”) with playful creation, where someone is compelled by passion and interest to put a lot of effort into creating something. In fact, we know that, ironically, we are usually more productive in this passionate state, than when we are managed and disciplined into doing something we do not care about.
[16]: https://sive.rs/ti
[17]: https://baty.net/2024/01/ending-my-openbsd-experiment
[18]: https://blog.testdouble.com/posts/2024-01-02-plant-your-flag-career-advice/
[19]: https://vladh.net/wage-labour-resources/
[20]: https://brainbaking.com/post/2024/01/december-2023/