The Hidden Cost of Keeping Your Options Open (with David Epstein)
In 1960, A publisher at Random House bet a writer $50 that he couldn't produce a children's book using just 50 distinct words. That writer was Dr. Seuss, and the resulting book was Green Eggs and Ham, which has gone on to sell more than 200 million copies. Sometimes, limits aren't a bad thing. In fact, they often lead to unexpected breakthroughs in creativity, productivity, and satisfaction. This is the message at the heart of David Epstein's new book, Inside the Box: How Constraints Make Us Better. This is something elite performers know well. They aren't adding more and more or keeping their options open; they're whittling down to what matters most. So we wanted to ask David on to give us the lessons from his book and from his research that can most effectively help us do that too.

Pain is All In Your Head (and That's Not a Bad Thing)

How Constraints Make Better Runners & Coaches (w/ Dave Epstein)

The Secret Behind 20 Years of Daily Writing (Maria Popova Interview)

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How to Write Strikingly Well (Lee Child Interview)

Why Economics is Bullsh*t – and How to Fix It | Kate Raworth on ‘Doughnut Economics’

Conan O’Brien Delivers the Commencement Address | Harvard Commencement 2026

This Executive Coach Works With The Top 0.01% & is Sharing Her Secrets | Dr. Julie Gurner

How to Break Through Barriers (Lessons from the Sub-Two-Hour Marathon)

Writing Advice Every Writer Should Hear (Anne Lamott Interview)

The Strange Psychology of Getting Rich! | Morgan Housel

Elon Musk & America’s Tech Oligarchy | The Weekly Show with Jon Stewart

HOMILÍA DE HOY | DIOS AYÚDAME A CONFIAR AUNQUE NO ENTIENDA NADA | PADRE FREDDY BUSTAMANTE

How to Be More Successful Than 99% of People | Malcolm Gladwell

Balance is a Myth: How to Build Healthy Obsession

Mark Richards and Neal Ford Reflect on Software Architecture: The Hard Parts

The Psychology of Overthinking | Mark Manson

Is the AI Boom About to COLLAPSE?

