What is the psychology of the liar? There are various ways of classifying lies: by their consequences, by the importance of their subject matters, by the speakers' motives, and by the nature or context of the utterance. Perhaps the most useful way to classify lies is by the type of liars who tell them.| Nir and Far
Timeboxing is the nearest thing we have to productivity magic, yet most people don’t utilize it. It amounts to boxing out periods of time to work on distinct tasks each day. But when I recommend perhaps the most effective technique ever devised to help people stay on track, most of them balk.| Nir and Far
What are some important values that should guide your life choices? In this list of 50+ common personal values, you’ll see they all have something in common.| Nir and Far
Best-selling author Nir Eyal gives science-based insights to build healthy habits, improve productivity and focus, and manage distraction.| Nir and Far
Failure is baked into the human experience. So why are we so terrible at dealing with it? Fear of judgment and the stigma that our failures reflect poorly on us discourage us from trying new things. Negative self-talk and rumination convince us that our failures mean we’re incapable and undeserving. But failure is typical in all professions.| Nir and Far
The world is full of distractions. In this article, Nir lays out a method on how to master our response to the internal triggers of distractions.| Nir and Far
Many of us strive to be "indistractable". This means we set out each day to complete our important tasks while avoiding distractions, which could derail us from achieving our flow state [https://blog.superhuman.com/finding-flow-your-personal-toolkit-for-achieving-the-flow-state/] . To behavioral expert Nir Eyal [https://www.nirandfar.com/], being indistractable is something he's| Superhuman Blog