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Kaustab Choudhury
is on page 92 of 278
Day 52: Henry James. A man of habits, both short-term and long-term. For instance, he habitually started working on a new book the instant he was finished with the previous one.
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Every person in this book wakes up early every day and works until evening. Then they go out and get drunk. Ideal life i guess.👏🏻👏🏻
— 19 hours, 23 min ago
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Kaustab Choudhury
is on page 91 of 278
Day 51: William James. James argued that we must make our nervous system our ally instead of enemy. This is to be done by forming "habits of order". “Recollect,” he noted, 'that only when habits of order are formed can we advance to really interesting fields of action—and consequently accumulate grain on grain of wilful choice like a very miser—never forgetting how one link dropped undoes an indefinite number."
— Jan 20, 2026 08:35AM
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Kaustab Choudhury
is on page 89 of 278
Day 50: Immanuel Kant. One of the most important philosophers. Kant adopted what he called "a certain uniformity in the way of living and in
the matters about which I employ my mind". At the core of one’s character, he thought, were maxims: a handful of essential rules for living that, once formulated, should be followed for the rest of one’s life. But alas, we do not have a written list of Kant’s personal maxims.
— Jan 19, 2026 08:52AM
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the matters about which I employ my mind". At the core of one’s character, he thought, were maxims: a handful of essential rules for living that, once formulated, should be followed for the rest of one’s life. But alas, we do not have a written list of Kant’s personal maxims.
Kaustab Choudhury
is on page 87 of 278
Day 49: James Boswell. A moody biographer. On a good day, his "affairs are conducted with the greatest regularity and exactness". On a bad day, he woke in a foul mood, "dreary as a dromedary", convinced that "everything is insipid or everything is dark". There was little he could do to control these moods. He concludes: “Life has much uneasiness; that is certain. Always remember that, and it will never surprise you.”
— Jan 17, 2026 10:34PM
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Kaustab Choudhury
is on page 85 of 278
Day 48: Samuel Johnson. Apparently, Johnson was a night dweller. He would be out until 2AM, and only thereafter would he start working (while the rest of London slept). "My reigning sin, to which perhaps many others are appendant, is waste of time, and general sluggishness" Yet, he added, he was temperamentally ill-equipped for the battle: "I myself have never persisted in any plan for two days together."
— Jan 17, 2026 05:35AM
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Kaustab Choudhury
is on page 84 of 278
Day 47: Jonathan Edwards. “For each insight he wished to remember, he would pin a small piece of paper on a particular part of his clothes, which he would associate with the thought. When he returned home he would unpin these and write down each idea. At the ends of trips of several days, his clothes might be covered by quite a few of these slips of paper.”
— Jan 16, 2026 05:26AM
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Kaustab Choudhury
is on page 83 of 278
Day 46: Margaret Mead. Once, Mead got news that a certain morning session had been postponed. She was furious. “How dare they? Do they realize what use I could have made of this time? Do they know I get up at five o’clock every morning to write a thousand words before breakfast? Why did nobody have the politeness to tell me this meeting had been rescheduled?” A sentiment some of us can very well relate to.
— Jan 15, 2026 05:39AM
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