Edit out the nonessential

Routinely cut commitments, possessions, and tasks that no longer serve the essential.

Why it works

Commitments accumulate by default — saying yes is easy and removing things requires deliberate effort, so without active editing your life silently fills with the nonessential. Treating subtraction as an ongoing discipline, like an editor cutting a draft, keeps the vital few from being buried under the slowly accreting many.

How to do it

  1. Periodically review commitments and ask what you’d add today if it weren’t already there.
  2. Cut what fails that test rather than keeping it out of inertia.
  3. Treat removal as a recurring practice, not a one-time purge.

Evidence

Consistent with research on the status-quo and endowment biases — people over-keep what they already have — which makes deliberate, recurring subtraction necessary. (observational)

The biases are well established; that periodic editing counteracts them is a sound application rather than a directly tested practice.

Sources

  • Samuelson & Zeckhauser (1988), status quo bias in decision making, J. Risk and Uncertainty

Common mistake

Only ever adding and never subtracting, so even a good system slowly silts up with commitments that no longer earn their place.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach runs a recurring review that asks whether each commitment would make the cut today, prompting deliberate subtraction.

Start with IX Coach

7 days free, then $40/month (~$1.30/day).