3 : More Haste, Less Speed Apr 2026

To move fast by being smooth, not by being hurried. 2. Practical Strategies

Spend 10% of your time purely on preparation. Checking your tools, confirming instructions, or outlining a project prevents the "mid-way pivots" that kill momentum. 3 : More haste, less speed

The phrase is a classic paradox. It suggests that when you rush to finish something quickly, you often make mistakes that force you to start over, ultimately taking longer than if you had just been deliberate from the start. 1. The Core Philosophy To move fast by being smooth, not by being hurried

On long tasks, stop every 30 minutes for a 60-second review. Are you still on the right track? Catching a wrong turn early saves hours of backtracking. 3. Knowing When to Slow Down Checking your tools, confirming instructions, or outlining a

Switch your metric from to "Progress Made." You aren't "faster" because you are sweating and moving quickly; you are faster because the task is finished correctly.

Rushing through a packing list usually means buying a $50 replacement at your destination.

Is frantic, emotional, and reactive. It focuses on the clock.