HACKER Q&A
📣 bryk

What book changed your life in 2019?


I'm interested in what book(s) changed your life in 2014. I ask because I'm going through something of a personal and professional renaissance.

Thanks for a great community and I look forward to your suggestions.


  👤 dmfdmf Accepted Answer ✓
The Upper Half of the Motorcycle: On The Unity of Rider and Machine. By Bernt Spiegel

Spiegel is a psychologist. If you are not a rider then you might not know that one of the main appeals of riding, that many riders have not explicitly identified, is the tight integration of mind/body or the subconscious and conscious mind. This was why I bought the book.

Your riding skills have to be automatized subconsciously because the conscious mind is far too slow in this environment. In his book he has a number of riding "objectives" that you need to automatize to be an expert or world class rider. These are pretty standard riding tips and strategies but the part that changed my life was his recommendation of using an error counter. You get one of those hand-held tally-counters, like coaches use to count laps or reps, and you mount it on your bike and when you violate the rules or tips you count an error and forget about it. At the end of your ride or practice race you count and track your error rate and think about ways in which you could have done better.

Now I am just a recreational motorcycle rider and have no desire to become a world-class rider so I never used his method to improve my riding skills. Nevertheless, I realized that everything he says about riding applies to acting and living in your daily life! Daily life moves too fast to think/act consciously and most of our actions are guided by subconscious processing that we automatized in the past. The problem comes when you consciously want to change your behavior but keep subconsciously acting on old ideas, premises and habit.

So how do you undo that automatic error? I bought a couple of tally counters and carry one with me, one in my car etc and count errors in my automatic thoughts or actions for the week and calculate and track a daily error rate. In a few weeks I have been able to make progress on correcting subconscious errors that I have been trying to correct for decades with little to no progress. I am using it to count negative thoughts, mind-reading (of others), logical errors and other subconscious flaws that I want to fix or improve. This tip has changed my life and you probably don't even need to read the book to get this precious gem.


👤 pisteoff
Barbarian Days: A Surfing Life by William Finnegan

A beautiful book about waves, love, writing, and living a good life. As a surfer, skier, mountain biker, and overall risk taker, this book affected me in the same way "Walden Pond" or "Pilgrim at Tinker Creek" affects some people. It is the most impactful book I've read in the past 10 years. Probably not for everyone, but for those of a certain ilk it is stunning.


👤 jurgenwerk
Antifragile by Nassim Nicholas Taleb. Man, reading this book really put a fire under my ass. I realized how much more I could be getting out of life by pursuing optionality and using the barbell strategy.

A quote that stuck with me the most is: "If you have more than one reason to do something, don't do it." That means that you are trying to convince yourself to do it. Obvious decisions require no more than one good reason.


👤 rocketpastsix
"The Simple Path to Wealth" by JL Collins. Gave me a clear path to what to do with my money and investments.

👤 raptorraver
Biography of saint Siluan the Athonite deeply affected how I view the world and people around me https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/898516.Saint_Silouan_the...

👤 shekhardesigner
Prisoners of Geography by Tim Marshall.

This book gave me broader prospective in understanding geopolitics in a way I have never thought before.

After reading this book, I see world and global event differently, my biased opinion about many countries have changed.


👤 Anon84

👤 swirepe
"The Argonauts" by Maggie Nelson. It turns out that gender is pretty complex, and I hadn't spent much time thinking about it before.

👤 rchaudhary
Why We Sleep by Matthew Walker

👤 hikerclimb
The last lecture