I regularly let work emails sit a day or two to give people realistic expectations for when I’m actually busy.
not compatible with the kind of
life i leadbrain i haveYUP. Took me a few years to realize that there wasn’t actually anything wrong with me for not being able to keep up in a “fast paced working environment”
If it’s a quick thing, I respond quickly. If it’s a complicated thing, I respond slowly. If I am answering a technical question, I usually take an hour or more to write, let it sit for an hour and up to four. Then, I revise for 30-60 minutes. Sometimes I let it sit again, and revise again. Most emails don’t get this treatment, but what I say needs to be accurate, based in statute and consistent with the tenets of my field. What I tell others may be used as the basis for decisions for years, and may be quoted to the service providers we oversee. It’s worth it to take the time. I also tend to use the language I’ve used in previous emails when writing responses to similar questions. So, I save some time that way.
no
t compatible with the kind of life i lead brain i have

I find that con artists don’t like to communicate slowly. It makes them uncomfortable.
This is all the more true after reports came out at the end of last year regarding just how slowly the human brain works.
Here I thought I was thinking I was crazy for always deliberating on things rather than just react
That’s why society is a fast as it is. Buy buy buy now now now!!
We really should all be slowmaxxing like this. It will take some time…to start taking some time🙂





