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Peter checks in while recovering from a cold and deep into the newly released Forza Horizon 6 (set in Japan); Aubrey is heading into summer break and excited about her personal training certification. The episode's central metaphor — "motivation is weather, systems are climate" — frames a rich conversation about why motivation fades and what it looks like to build sustainable personal systems instead. Peter catalogs a long history of task management apps before landing on a daily-note-plus-Todoist system, automated through Claude Cowork, that finally fits how his brain works. Aubrey shares her own collection of small systems — a scripted 5:30 a.m. gym routine with Hayden, a fixed pre-gym snack, strict grocery lists across three stores — all designed to eliminate meaningless decision fatigue. They close with the bigger picture: behavior change requires identity change first, and as Scott Barry Kaufman puts it, "the system hand keeps the lights on, but the soul hand decides whether the lights are pointing at anything worth looking at."
By Peter and Aubrey JonesPeter checks in while recovering from a cold and deep into the newly released Forza Horizon 6 (set in Japan); Aubrey is heading into summer break and excited about her personal training certification. The episode's central metaphor — "motivation is weather, systems are climate" — frames a rich conversation about why motivation fades and what it looks like to build sustainable personal systems instead. Peter catalogs a long history of task management apps before landing on a daily-note-plus-Todoist system, automated through Claude Cowork, that finally fits how his brain works. Aubrey shares her own collection of small systems — a scripted 5:30 a.m. gym routine with Hayden, a fixed pre-gym snack, strict grocery lists across three stores — all designed to eliminate meaningless decision fatigue. They close with the bigger picture: behavior change requires identity change first, and as Scott Barry Kaufman puts it, "the system hand keeps the lights on, but the soul hand decides whether the lights are pointing at anything worth looking at."