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---
title: "Slow Down to Speed Up"
date: 2025-08-19
description: "Why choosing the slower path often leads to faster, more meaningful progress."
draft: false
tags: ["productivity", "analog-first", "North Star", "mindset"]
categories: ["essays"]
---
# Slow Down to Speed Up
We live in an age where “fast” is the ultimate virtue. Fast Wi-Fi, fast apps, fast delivery, fast news cycles. If something takes longer than a few seconds, we start to fidget. Productivity software promises more speed, but often what it delivers is more noise, more clutter, and more distraction.
The irony? Were sprinting, but not moving forward. Weve confused acceleration with progress.
The truth—one I had to learn the hard way—is this:
**sometimes the fastest way to move ahead is to deliberately slow down.**
---
## The Tyranny of False Urgency
Modern work thrives on urgency. Notifications ping, inboxes fill, Slack threads multiply, and were trained to react instantly. That little red badge on your phone might as well be a cattle prod.
We mistake speed for value: quick replies, rapid task switching, always available. But “fast” in this sense is just reacting. Its a hamster wheel—constant motion with no forward direction.
Ive lived that cycle. Days where I jumped between emails, texts, and messages, only to collapse at night realizing I hadnt touched the one thing that actually mattered. The digital quicksand of “urgent” leaves no space for “important.”
---
## The Wisdom of Slowness
When you pick up a pen and write something down, the pace shifts. The brain engages differently. Handwriting isnt just slower—its more deliberate. The words take longer to form, and that friction forces thought.
Slowness is a filter. It strips away the trivial and highlights the essential.
A single 3×5 card with three lines written on it carries more clarity than an app full of half-baked tasks. The slower process sharpens the edge of your thinking.
Ive seen it firsthand: the times I scrawled a note on a card, set it down, and came back hours later only to realize—yes, thats the thing I should be working on. By slowing the capture, I clarified the choice.
---
## Momentum vs. Acceleration
Heres where physics gives us a metaphor worth holding on to.
Acceleration is change in speed. Momentum is sustained, directional movement.
Modern productivity culture worships acceleration—do more, faster, now. But without direction, acceleration is wasted energy. Its burning fuel in circles.
Momentum, on the other hand, is what gets you somewhere. Its the product of speed and mass moving in a single direction. And momentum is only possible when you take the time to choose your direction first.
Slowing down isnt about stopping—its about steering. A few extra minutes spent clarifying the path saves hours of aimless acceleration later.
---
## The North Star in Practice
My own productivity system—the **North Star**—is built on this paradox.
- Start slow: write on paper, one card per thought.
- Capture deliberately: dont flood the inbox with noise.
- Transition later: scan into Nextcloud, where the server quietly handles search and retrieval.
On the surface, it looks inefficient. Why write on paper when you could type it instantly? But the result is speed in the moments that count: clarity, retrieval, and execution.
When I sit down to work, I dont have to wade through a thousand stale tasks in an app. I look at a card, or I search my server, and the answer is right there.
Slowness on the front end creates speed on the back end.
---
## Lessons from Slower Eras
This isnt a new idea. Our grandparents and great-grandparents lived it out of necessity. Farmers didnt rush planting—they measured the weather, prepared the soil, and knew that hasty mistakes could cost a season. Craftsmen followed the old adage: *measure twice, cut once*. Letter writers poured thought into a page before sealing it with wax.
These practices werent quaint rituals—they were survival strategies. Slowness was efficiency, because mistakes made in haste were expensive.
In the modern rush, weve traded that inherited wisdom for dopamine hits of speed. But the cost of haste hasnt changed—it just looks different: botched projects, shallow work, burnout.
---
## Practical Ways to Slow Down (Without Falling Behind)
Slowing down doesnt mean checking out. It doesnt mean throwing away your phone or pretending you live in the 1800s. Its about introducing deliberate friction at the right moments.
Here are practices Ive found useful:
- **Paper first.** Start with a card or notebook. One card, one idea. It forces clarity.
- **Single-task.** Dont multitask. Line up tasks in a physical queue. Do them in order.
- **Delay digital.** Dont rush to apps. Let ideas cool on paper before committing them to the system.
- **Ruthless pruning.** Write fewer tasks; execute them better. If its not worth a card, its not worth your time.
- **Daily reflection.** End the day slowly. Review what mattered, what didnt, and what deserves a place tomorrow.
These arent romantic gestures—theyre practical brakes that prevent waste.
---
## The Counterintuitive Result
Every time Ive resisted the urge to rush, the payoff has been bigger than expected.
Take planning, for example. Spending ten minutes with a card and a pen feels slow. But that ten minutes saves hours of wandering later. Or drafting this essay: by handwriting the outline first, I moved slower at the start—but the structure flowed faster once I sat at the keyboard.
The counterintuitive truth is that slowing down often produces more work, better work, in less time.
Its like sharpening an axe before chopping wood. The chopping takes less effort, but only if you had the patience to prepare.
---
## The Courage to Go Slow
Slowing down takes courage. In a culture obsessed with instant results, slowness can look like laziness. But thats the lie of modern speed culture.
Slowness is strength. Its the discipline to think, the patience to plan, and the foresight to avoid wasted motion.
Fast is fragile. Slow is strong.
So next time you feel the itch to rush, pause. Take the slower path. Write the note by hand. Step back. Think.
Because in the end, the slow path is usually the fastest way forward.
---
## Closing Thought
I call my system the **North Star** because its about orientation. Once you know where north is, you dont have to sprint—you just keep moving in the right direction.
And thats the point: slowing down isnt about losing speed—its about ensuring that when you move, youre actually headed where you want to go.
*Want to see how I put this into practice? Ill be breaking down the North Star in detail—paper first, server backed—in future posts. If that interests you, stick around.*