Member-only story
How To Implement Everything You Learn From Books, Courses And People, Without Guilt, Overwhelm Or Nervous Breakdown (Using Gall’s Law)
If you have read a book or attended an expensive course, you might ask yourself:
“There is so much I learned here, but how do I implement all of this?”
You might also be overwhelmed by all the constant advice you hear on Twitter (including this one). Suddenly you feel you are pulled in all directions, trying to do everything despite some of them being contradictory to each other.
Or you stop trying altogether, just numbing out, thinking
“They don’t know my hardship, my life, my problems! They don’t know what I’m going through. My life is special”
All of that while being in constant guilt that you SHOULD do X, Y, Z, and whatever.
If you can relate to all above, read on:
Gall’s Law to your rescue
Gall’s Law from his book Systemantics is defined like this:
“A complex system that works is invariably found to have evolved from a simple system that worked. A complex system designed from scratch never works and cannot be patched up to make it work. You have to start over with a working simple system.”