Site icon Brent Ozar

Epic Life Quest: Level 6 Achieved.

Sas Christian Peephole #1
Sas Christian Peephole #1

Life’s a lot more challenging when you turn it into a game and start keeping track of your progress. For a few years now, I’ve been on an Epic Life Quest: I made a list of future achievements I want to unlock, and when I unlock five in a row, I level up.

Here’s the five I pulled off over the last several months:

Looking out my balcony at South Sawyer Glacier

Last week, I took a one-week Alaska cruise in a balcony cabin and checked the last one off my list. It was a goofy timing thing – Erika and I flew out to the Oregon coast for the company retreat in July, then I had a free week between that and teaching our SQL Server Performance Troubleshooting class in Portland. Erika knew I’d been itching to take a cruise again (I hadn’t taken one in years), so she said, “Why not drive up to Seattle and hop on a boat?” She stayed behind in Seattle and had her own solo vacation week, hanging out in downtown Seattle.

I loved cruising alone. You can buy Internet on board, but it’s slow and expensive. I value that disconnected time, and I did a lot of writing and planning about my big-picture personal and business goals. I learned a lot about myself, thinking about my successes and challenges over the last year. (I do this a couple times a year.) When I got back online, I updated my Epic Life Quest Future Achievements page to more closely reflect my GTD 50k foot goal list.

Brent Ozar Unlimited 2015 Company Retreat

It’s funny – I would have thought my future achievements wanna-do list would get longer as I got older and honed my Epic Life Quest and GTD stuff. It’s been the opposite; knowing my actual rate of progress (I’m lucky to unlock one of these per month), it makes me think much harder before I add something to the list, and it makes me much quicker to delete something off the list. I think I deleted 25+ things off my private lists this go-round.

Focus also means letting go of things I’ve already done, too, and I’ve been letting DBAreactions coast to a stop. I had an awesome time doing it, and it was a great experience seeing it grow to huge popularity overnight, but I feel like it’s a box that I’ve checked off now. I still go in weekly and approve submissions, but I don’t write new material there anymore. I’m not sad about that – I’m excited for the time it gives me to focus on other new fun stuff.

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