RcouF1uZ4gsC 5 years ago

One technique I have found to be helpful in solving a hard problem is to stuff my head full of as much information about the problem right before bed. Then I go to sleep. Many times, I wake up in the middle of the night, having figured out a solution.

  • m463 5 years ago

    You are right.

    I used to try really really hard to learn something or solve a problem and I found a lot of times just sleeping on it made all the pieces fall into place. Sometimes you have to slow down to go faster.

  • saiya-jin 5 years ago

    Yes this is well known (even if rather unpredictable) effect, but unless you are either solving mankind's urgent global issues or at least building your own company / organizing your own life, this approach sucks.

    You basically prefer faster problem solving (which usually means work-related problems for your employer) to having a good long uninterrupted sleep, which is important in physical and mental regeneration. Or am I missing something, ie you suffer from some form of insomnia and you wouldn't get a good sleep anyway?

antman 5 years ago

John Cleese from Monty Python made many years ago a presentation about open and closed mode of thinking which is similar and how it related to their work. https://youtu.be/Pb5oIIPO62g

ry454 5 years ago

Being focused is often confused with being busy with random thoughts. Being focused on one thing feels like stretching out your brains - a very remarkable feeling. On the other hand, being busy with thoughts raises blood pressure and that makes head feel heavy. When we're working on something, we usually do the latter.

Vaslo 5 years ago

Picked up the book this is based off at Half-Priced book. They give a really good example I’ll leave for the reader, but it’s a seemingly simple task but hard to solve. The book asks you to walk away and do something different for a while. When you return, you are able to finish. Demonstrates the idea very well and highly recommend the book.

keyle 5 years ago

I like to think of this as conscious thinking, and subconscious thinking.

By focusing your mind on a topic for a while and leaving it there to germinate ("sleep on it") for a while, you often come back to it with a clearer focus.

If your subsconscious didn't anchor on it, it's probably not worth pursuing (e.g. you don't care).

This is why I'm still on slack and HN... I need that step away from focussed thinking (let's pretend).