All fixed set patterns are incapable of adaptability or pliability. The truth is outside of all fixed patterns.
-Bruce Lee
In Getting Things Done, productivity guru David Allen discuses the benefits of having a "Mind Like Water." Here’s the quotation . . .
In karate there is an image that’s used to define the position of perfect readiness: "mind like water." Imagine throwing a pebble into a still pond. How does the water respond? The answer is, totally appropriately to the force and mass of the input; then it returns to calm. It doesn’t overreact or underreact.
-David Allen
He then explains why Mind Like Water is beneficial. . .
Anything that causes you to overreact or underreact can control you, and often does. Responding inappropriately to your e-mail, your staff, your projects, your unread magazines, your thoughts about what you need to do, your children, or your boss will lead to less effective results than you’d like. Most people give either more or less attention to things than they deserve, simply because they don’t operate with a "mind like water."
-David Allen
A Mind Like Water is a beautiful thing and a grounded mode of existence. I’ve been there before, and it’s great. I want to make this one thing clear: the possibility of having a mind like water is not, itself, a myth.
So what is the Mind Like Water Myth? Here goes . . .
[I]f you get seriously far out of that state–and start to feel out of control, stressed out, unfocused, bored, and stuck–do you have the ability to get yourself back into it? That’s where the methodology of [my Productivity system] will have the greatest impact on your life, by showing you how to get back to "mind like water," with all your resources and faculties functioning at a maximum level.
-David Allen
The Mind Like Water Myth is the myth that Productivity — or a Productivity system — is the path, and that Mind Like Water is the destination.
The possession of anything begins in the mind
-Bruce Lee
I believe Bruce is right: possession of a mind like water begins in the mind. It’s not productivity first, mind like water second. It’s the other way around.
When there is freedom from mechanical conditioning, there is simplicity. The classical man is just a bundle of routine, ideas and tradition. If you follow the classical pattern, you are understanding the routine, the tradition, the shadow – you are not understanding yourself.
-Bruce Lee
The Mind Like Water myth is the myth is that any productivity system can be the starting point for having “all your resources and faculties functioning at maximum level.”
The myth is that a water-tight task-handling methodology, an elaborate folder system, a clockwork method for handling your inbox, a label-maker, and a set of routines come first. . .
Efficiency, which is doing things right, is irrelevant until you work on the right things.
-Peter DruckerYou shouldn’t be trying to do more in each day, trying to fill every second with a work fidget of some type. … [T]he person who…develops an elaborate system of folder rules … is efficient on some perverse level. … Doing something well does not make it important … What you do is infinitely more important than how you do it.
-Timothy Ferriss
It’s not that Productivity systems are bad. Most of us impose organization on our lives in in an effort to stay focused, keep on track. And this is a GOOD thing. But the myth that external organization comes first and that mind-like-water comes second is, however, misleading. The myth is that capturing everything in your life and placing it in a productivity system is a starting point for the clear and fearless mind of a karate master.
. . . using no way as a way, using no limitations as a limitation.
-Bruce Lee
Here’s the problem: if we need an external system to have a mind like water, then that mind is a pot of gold at the end of a very long rainbow that many of us may never reach.
From form to formless and from finite to infinite. Don’t be confined by limitations and forms.
-Bruce Lee
This, I believe, is the truth: a mind like water must come first. Living in the present must come first.
As you think, so shall you become.
-Bruce Lee
The few people I know who’s minds are consistently like water, who have simplicity of thought and zen-like focus and instinct, do not need a complex system to attain the mind-like-water state.
It’s actually the other way around: their production, the fruit of their creation, started with a clear mind. The mind like water was the path and the productivity was the destination.
The moment you rely too much on theory or doctrines or elaborate procedures it disables groundedness, intuition, instinct, adaptability and spontaneity.
-Xuan Xian
This myth isn’t limited to any Productivity system (including Getting Things Done): it is a subtle but incredibly pervasive meme running through our culture: than a clutter-free environment, a pill, a system of inboxes, or a Productivity system can give us maximum and utmost mental clarity.
In [a] society which confuses work and productivity, the necessity of producing has always been an enemy of the desire to create.
-Raoul Vaneigem
The myth is that clarity starts outside of us, and that we should produce an (often incredibly) high level of external organization in order to experience internal organization.
Simplicity is the outward sign and symbol of depth of thought.
-Lin Yutang
Mind like water comes first.
Life is really simple, but we insist on making it complicated.
-ConfuciusFocus your attention on the Now and tell me what problem you have at this moment. I am not getting any answer because it is impossible to have a problem when your attention is fully in the Now. A situation that needs to be either dealt with or accepted – yes. Why make it into a problem? Why make anything into a problem? Isn’t life challenging enough as it is? What do you need problems for? The mind unconsciously loves problems because they give you an identity of sorts. This is normal, and it is insane. "Problem" means that you are dwelling on a situation mentally without there being a true intention or possibility of taking action now and that you are unconsciously making it part of your sense of self.
-Eckhart Tolle
What do you think?
Final Note: This article is not about the value of productivity systems. I have benefited from the ideas of Productivity systems and I have no doubt that such systems have helped thousands of people become more efficient, perhaps more effective, and that they have led to reduced anxiety about unfinished tasks given good plans for getting things done.
I am grateful to you for reading.
~Clay
[tags]getting things done, organizing our lives, mind like water, Bruce Lee, David Allen, productivity, productivity systems, Eckhart Tolle, Timothy Ferriss[/tags]


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Tags: Bruce Lee, David Allen, Eckhart Tolle, getting things done, mind like water, organizing our lives, Productivity, productivity systems, Timothy Ferriss

All fixed set patterns are incapable of adaptability or pliability. The truth is outside of all fixed patterns.
Anything that causes you to overreact or underreact can control you, and often does. Responding inappropriately to your e-mail, your staff, your projects, your unread magazines, your thoughts about what you need to do, your children, or your boss will lead to less effective results than you’d like. Most people give either more or less attention to things than they deserve, simply because they don’t operate with a "mind like water."
When there is freedom from mechanical conditioning, there is simplicity. The classical man is just a bundle of routine, ideas and tradition. If you follow the classical pattern, you are understanding the routine, the tradition, the shadow – you are not understanding yourself.
In [a] society which confuses work and productivity, the necessity of producing has always been an enemy of the desire to create.
Life is really simple, but we insist on making it complicated.


Clay Collins is widely regarded as one of the top internet marketers in the world. Now in his 30s, Clay left home at age 15 to start his first software company and has been practicing entrepreneurship, off and on, ever since. Clay has been behind the scenes (advising and writing copy) for some of the most important and highest grossing information marketing campaigns on the internet.
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