Reading is a good way of keep reflecting and learning new things and tips throughout your life. The following are books I recommend based on the “area” you want to work on. Remember you can get all of this on paper or audio.
- Four Thousand Weeks: Time Management for Mortals
- Make Time: How to Focus on What Matters Every Day
- Feel-Good Productivity: How to Do More of What Matters to You
- How to Change: The Science of Getting from Where You Are to Where You Want to Be
- Digital Minimalism: Choosing a Focused Life in a Noisy World
- The Checklist Manifesto
- Deep Work: Rules for Focused Success in a Distracted World
- Atomic Habits: An Easy & Proven Way to Build Good Habits & Break Bad Ones
If you need to process the philosophy of choice, and what is important and what is not, this book can help with that.
This book can help with two things: Understanding how other prioritize and optimize their identities AND it has a bunch of “behavioral tricks” to help you form habits and schedule your time.
This book’s main thesis is that you have to make things “fun” and once that is done, everything will take care of itself. So this book is helpful for those who struggle how to make things “fun” for themselves.
This is a great book that teaches us science-backed behavioral insights on how to change and create habits that can be long lasting. Lots of stuff here!
The book main thesis is how to use technology is a way that is not as distracting as it needs to be. I think it’s very useful for a variety of individuals, it’s short, and to the point. It can hep you reflect on what is your philosophy of use of technology for yourself.
This is a very short book, focused on one particular “trick”. Having checklists. If you are not a checklist person, this book can motivate you to be one, or give you ideas of where/how to use checklist that you otherwise wouldn’t have thought about.
This book is focused on the importance of deep work, and ways one could achieve it. It’s very popular and persuasive!
This is another popular book and it’s base on the premise that habits are important. The rest of the book is about how to achieve creating habits.