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Welcome Lifehackers, Glad to Have You Here

I'm really, really flattered to have one of my pieces appear in Lifehacker. Lifehacker always has such a depth of cool things happening on there, and it's a great place to go search for ideas on how to improve your life.

So I ask myself, what are people from Lifehacker going to enjoy checking out on the site?

Well, the "New? Start Here" page would be an okay place to start. But I haven't updated it with some of the successful recent articles.

How to Get a Raise was extremely popular.

Whilst talking about money and business, “We don’t get out of bed for less than $10,000 per day.” also spread like wildfire, though had a more controversial reaction - while most people liked How to Get a Raise, $10,000 per day was either loved or hated.

Willpower as muscle, not battery

Adam Limehouse writes in about "The Cognitive Costs of Doing Things" -

Mr. Marshall,

First off, very cool article.

Second off, I have a question/conflict about the language you used when talking about ego/willpower depletion. I would suggest that instead of talking about it in terms of a battery (something that can be depleted, must be recharged from the outside and eventually wears out) it would be better to approach this in terms of a muscle group many people have allowed to become lax (a virtue ethics perspective if ever there was one). I think the advantage here has to do both with the need for external charging intrinsic in the metaphor of batteries and with the status in most Americans minds of the possibility of becoming physically stronger as something they can do. We might pursue this as a sort of meta-willpower.

Would love to hear your thoughts about this, Adam