#224: Unplanned Absence.
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Hello and welcome to Developing Perspective. Developing Perspective is a podcast discussing
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news and note in iOS development, Apple and the like. I'm your host, David Smith. I'm
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an independent iOS developer based in Herndon, Virginia. This is show number 224, and today
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is Friday, July 31st. Developing Perspective is never longer than 15 minutes, so let's
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get started.
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All right, first, just a kind of a minor note that I thought was interesting. I realized
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that Developing Perspective is now four years old.
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The first episode was on July 13th, 2011,
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so about 210 weeks ago, and like I just said,
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this is episode 224, so that is quite something.
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All right, the main topic I'm gonna be talking about today,
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that, and it's also probably, you may have noticed,
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there's been a pretty large gap
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between this episode and the previous one.
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The actual topic is going to be talking about what
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the implications are when you run your own business,
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when you're a dependent, whether that's
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doing consulting or otherwise, when you are forced to take
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an unexpected break from work.
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I recently, for the last few weeks,
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have been navigating kind of a tricky, difficult, personal
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situation, the details of which I won't really go into.
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But suffice to say, I was unable to do a lot of work
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over the last couple of weeks.
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And as a result, it's had some interesting sort
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knock-on effects on my work in terms of what I do, and it's a kind of a situation that
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doesn't happen very often, thankfully. And so I wanted to make sure, like, whenever I
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hit something in my work that is kind of unique, kind of new, I want to talk about it, because
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those are often, I think, the experiences that other people can learn from the most,
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because they're not run-of-the-mill, they're not things that happen every day, and so they're
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hopefully helpful. So first, one of the interesting things about being, when you're running into
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situation like this when you are self-employed is like on the positive side, you know, you
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don't have to worry about some of the things that you would have to at a normal, typical
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job. I didn't have like a PTO balance, you know, a Paytime Off Balance that I have to
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worry about. I didn't have to like apply for like the Family Medical Leave Act or things
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like that or worry about, you know, the politics of how do I interact with my boss? Do I have
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to get approval for this? How much approval can I get? How like those types of things
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like are kind of things that you would normally have to worry about in a typical job. And
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thankfully, by being self-employed, you just kind of stop working, which I'll get to in
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a minute is kind of tricky. But isn't in a plus side is kind of cool. Like, it is interesting
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to think about if I'd had to take, you know, pay time off for some of these things, like
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that would have been really tricky or leave without pay or those types of things like
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it's kind of nice to just not have those those hurdles to work through. And on the plus side,
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else, I don't have quite the same situation around letting people down.
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And by that, I mean, I remember when I used to spend a long time now, but back in the
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day when I had a more traditional job, I'd go into the internet.
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I'd be working on teams.
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I'd have people who were depending on me to do a job.
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For the last job I had, we did the agile method thing, so you're working on sprints and you're
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making commitments to that.
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And in that situation, if I just suddenly had to take a break, that would have been
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problematic in a lot of ways.
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And obviously it would have worked out fine.
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People I worked with were always awesome, but it still would have been something that
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would have felt great to be letting these people that I work with day in and day out,
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these are my friends, my colleagues, to sort of let them down and break some commitments
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that I would have been meeting with them at the previous sprint planning meeting or something.
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Another sort of last kind of really cool thing that I discovered, which I guess I always
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knew, but it's kind of fun to really be able to see, is one of the nice things about being
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self-employed and being independent is that when I need to, I can truly and completely
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prioritize non-work activities. Like, it is always, I am able to make that choice. It
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is entirely up to me the degree to which I focus and put my attention onto my work, and
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the degree to which I put my time and attention into things that are non-work activities.
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And so it was really kind of nice to be able to say like, you know what,
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I'm not going to worry about work right now. I'm going to focus on other things,
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the things that are more important to me, and I'm going to work on that and just, you know,
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work will sort itself out. So now I'm sort of switching over into some of the maybe not so
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great parts of this situation that are kind of interesting to think about is obviously when I
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I did this, I wasn't getting anything done. And that is interesting. Like, the funny thing
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about being self-employed is you find, at least to the kind of work I do, your business's
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sort of success in health is very much a trailing indicator. And by that, I mean, you know,
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the work I do today, I don't really see the benefits of for a substantial period of time.
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You know, it's like, when I look back six months from now, I'll probably be able to
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tell a difference, but at the moment, in the meantime, you don't really see it.
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And so that's kind of tricky.
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And I'm very thankful in the situation that I'm not a contractor doing that kind of work,
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where it would have been really problematic if I was hourly and suddenly my income just
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stops precipitously.
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One of the things that has been really awesome about spending the last seven years building
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a business that is more hands-off and more passive, I guess you could say, is things
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continued to sort of hum along as I was. And that's certainly not to say that things didn't
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fall through the tracks. A lot of things did, you know, in terms of, you know, there's things
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I missed and there's things that I should have done that I probably didn't. That's just
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the reality and I'm okay with that. You know, it was it was a choice that I made. But overall,
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it was kind of, you know, it was a tricky balance to feel like there's this amorphous
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fear that I was feeling that I didn't really know what that would mean to just like stop
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working for a couple of weeks and focus on something else. And so I'll see, I suppose.
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Like, maybe in six months I'll be doing an episode talking about the overall impact.
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My gut says that overall the impact will be fairly minor insofar as, you know, maybe I'll
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launch one less app this fall, which is funny to say, but maybe I'll launch two rather than
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three this fall. Or maybe there'll be this very minor and kind of amorphous change in
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my business income, but more likely than not, it won't have that kind of an effect, because
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that's not really the kind of business I'm in.
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I'm not really in a very one-to-one business that, honestly, is like one of the motivation
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challenges I have doing the kind of work I do is that there is no direct connection between
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the work I do and the outcome of that work.
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And so sometimes that's really hard from a motivation perspective, because this feedback
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loop is very amorphous and generic. So you kind of just have this like, "Well, I should
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work because I should work." And that's kind of, you know, not necessarily very satisfying,
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but it is what it is. But so that's kind of some of the high-level notes that I thought
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would be interesting to talk about. And the other thing that I kind of want to shift to
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focus for the rest of the episode is some of the things that I noticed from this experience
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that I thought would be more transferable, which is hopefully, you know, the things that
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that would really be helpful to you, the listener, if you're ever in the situation or if you
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want to prepare honestly for the situation. Because while these things don't typically
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happen very often, thankfully, they can happen and they do happen. And when they do, you
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want to at least have some kind of preparation. You want to have some kind of thoughtfulness
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around it, to be proactive rather than reactive. And so one of the first things that I noticed
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It's just how glad I am that I don't do my own help desk and customer support.
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This is, I think, something I have to mention time and time again.
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For the last probably five or six years, it is something that I've had someone else do
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And there's a bunch of primary reasons for that, and the most significant of which is
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just the emotional toll that when I did my own help desk, it took on me.
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Because while sometimes you just hear the positive or the neutral, every now and then
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you'll hear somebody who is just kind of being mean.
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And that just was tearing, sort of really demotivating and really painful for me.
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And so I have someone else do that, which I guess, because for them it's not as personal.
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It's not quite the same thing as when someone talks about your product that you made.
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It's more of a job for them.
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And so that also has meant that when I take breaks away from work, from most of my customers'
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perspectives, that is fairly transparent to them.
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The apps are still in the store, the servers are up and running, which I'll get to in a
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And if they reach out and they contact, someone will get back to them probably.
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You know, things will certainly fall down.
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There's only some things that only I can do, which is a bit tricky.
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But by and large, that was a really powerful thing.
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Because if I hadn't done that, and there was just this like queue of email piling up that
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I was expected to be able to work on, that would have been really awkward and really
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problematic and made me feel worse about things getting missed.
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You know, like the reality that's nice is if something crazy and significant had happened
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while I was gone, then I would have been noted.
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The person who does my help desk would have just reached out to me and told me, and that
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would have been fine.
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And I would have been able to make the decision of, "How significant is it?
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Do I really need to drop everything and go fix that?"
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Whatever it is.
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And along those lines, definitely a situation like this is where you really get to test
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the effectiveness of the notification systems and monitoring and things that you have in
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always say, if you don't test your backups, you don't really have a backup. In some ways,
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it's kind of nice to be able to—I had a few little things, minor glitches happened
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here and there, and I was aware of them. I was aware of them at the appropriate time,
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and I was aware of them at the appropriate level. The thing that you all start to really
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notice in a situation like this, when you have very limited attention to focus on to
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something like work, is are your notification and thresholds for everything appropriate?
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one thing when you say you--
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I'm not one of these people I used to be,
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but where you have a lot of Twitter notifications,
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for example, or email notifications,
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like your phone buzzes every time something comes in.
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If you have a lot of time and energy and focus
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for those types of things, the tiny little distraction
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that that is every day--
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it's probably not great in general,
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but you can pay for that in a tangible way
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if you have a lot of attention available.
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And you don't really notice it in some ways.
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And that's the insidious part, that you
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have a tiny, you know, like a thousand micro-distractions a day, you can kind of work through. But if
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you don't have—if you just have no time or energy or attention, force, that kind of
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a thing, you really notice if something's notifying you too much, or your threshold
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for something is too low, because you come back to your phone and it's like, there's
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50 things, and you know you've done something wrong at that point, and it's nice to be
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able to kind of experience that and kind of know that.
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One other thing—I mentioned this before, but it's something that I was able to kind
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of really feel was the importance of having a variety and a varied income in your business.
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This applies for, I think, everything, but it was really, it's very comforting to know
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that it's taken a lot of work to get here, but I have a variety of products and I have
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a variety of income sources. And in aggregate, it means that if I feel like I'm not putting
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all my eggs in one basket and if one thing kind of falls away, like there's a point
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on my app, my recipe book, which has really kind of been having some trouble recently
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in terms of some of the recipe import stuff that it has.
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And it's like, that was kind of hurting me a little bit.
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But I could be like, okay, that's not my only app.
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If something's going wrong there and I don't have the energy to fix it, that's okay, because
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I can just know that my other products will probably pick up the slack, at least for a
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while until I was able to get it fixed yesterday.
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And lastly, one of the things that I noticed, and this is something that you'll hear many,
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many times, but is the importance of avoiding making deadlines commitments or otherwise
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committing to something externally to your clients and your customers. The degree to
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which you can avoid that is really powerful. Like if I had said, "Hey, I'm going to ship
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something July 31st," if I had said I'd committed publicly that I was going to ship something
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or an update was going to be available by a particular date, that would have been really
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problematic when things outside my control mean that I can't do that. And so it's important
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to be really, really, really, really careful about making commitments about anything publicly.
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Like you can sort of get high level guidance or let people know and privately, you know,
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maybe in one-on-one interactions that may be appropriate, but be very careful about
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making a public commitment about a timeline or a feature set or anything like that.
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And then lastly, kind of a meta point, but something that I want, that was definitely
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noticeable on this, that it's something that I've seen before but wanted to mention, is
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you aren't nearly as important as you think you are.
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And this is just applies just as much to like a traditional jobby job kind of a situation
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as it is to being self-employed.
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I remember when I used to have a more traditional job,
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and I'd go on vacation for like a week or like 10 days,
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like a big proper vacation.
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And I'd come back, and just reeling up to it,
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I'd be so nervous.
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Something that only I can do or I'm so responsible for
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would fall apart while I was gone.
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And I'd go on vacation, and I'd come back,
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and everything was fine.
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And the same thing happens, honestly,
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when I left the company, the last place I left, I worked.
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I was like, there's all these things that I was responsible for.
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That's like, well, then I left.
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What were they going to do?
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And I like, I was kept in touch with those people.
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It's like, well, everything was fine.
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They just worked it out.
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Like, and it's important to keep that in mind when you feel overwhelmed, when you feel like
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things are overly important, where there's like, you're putting all this pressure and
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intensity on yourself, to remember that you're probably replaceable.
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And that's probably a good thing to feel that way.
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Not like in the negative sense, but to understand that it's not as important as you think it
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things in your life that are more important and more deserving of your attention than the little,
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like, whatever that minor task, whatever that thing is that you're putting this pressure on.
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And obviously, everyone's different, and it may not be for you, but for me, that was an important
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thing and a reminder to keep in mind that, like, my work is not the most important thing that I do.
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My work is by no means that thing, and so I'm kind of replaceable in it, and so that's a good thing
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to remember. And lastly, like, minor note, one thing that I thought of is it's kind of funny
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funny when you are out there on the outside looking in at all the little dramas and kerfuffles
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that happen in the news or whatever it is, like the little things that we all can get
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so worked up about during the normal news cycle. All the little dramas, all the little
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things, like when you're coming at it and you just barely have enough attention to dip
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your toe into it, you look at those things and you feel like, "That's just silly." And
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it's always good to guess to develop that perspective, to really think about, "Is this
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important? If I didn't get my feathers in a ruffle about this today, would it make any
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difference. And it probably, oftentimes it won't. And sometimes it does, but, you know,
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just have some perspective about it. And it's definitely something I've learned.
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All right, that's it for today's show. As always, questions, comments, concerns, complaints,
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I'm on Twitter @_davidsmith, david@developingperspective.com. Otherwise, you have a great week, happy coding,
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and I'll hopefully talk to you soon. Bye.