Chapter 28. Up to Nothing

In Silicon Valley, you burn a lot of calories.

It’s not just the daily burn of your gig; it’s everything else involved in staying afloat in a valley that is constantly reinventing itself. You sign up for every new service and spend the prerequisite 3.7 minutes to determine, “Does this matter?” You surf the Web, you tweet, you update your Facebook...all of which brings a constant flood of new data that needs to be sifted, sorted, and assessed.

You have compatriots in this caloric consumption. They randomly walk into your office or your life and with them they bring additional reasons to burn more calories. Have you seen this? You have to try it. In fact, I’m not leaving until you’re jumping up and down excited about this very important thing.

We are part of an industry that is addicted to enthusiasm, to getting things done, and discovering the new, but sometimes the right move is stopping and putting this world on hold. You need to learn how to build quiet moments of nothing as a measure of balance.

Which is why I go to a bookstore.

An Essential Exercise in Inactivity

The moment I walk into a bookstore, I remember what I love about them. They are an oasis of intellectual calm. Perhaps it’s the potential of all the ideas hidden behind those delicious covers. Or perhaps it’s the social reverence for the library-like quiet. You don’t yell in a bookstore; you’ll piss off the books.

A bookstore is where I rediscover that while I might be addicted ...

Get Being Geek now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.