| Nice article with interesting thoughts and I appreciate the quotes - but I respectfully disagree that 'finishing a personal project you’re doing just for yourself is impossible' I think it's really important to first reflect on the purpose when doing something: is it to solve a problem, is it to learn something, is it to achieve a target, is it to keep yourself busy to wind down and because you like doing it, or is it to promote yourself. The next step is to define a goal and a scope - not a deadline. When realizing it, it is important to take a pragmatic approach. All activities should lead towards achieving the goal - do not overengineer. This way, projects can actually get finished. From personal experience, I have been successful in software projects, sports competitions, building objects and furniture, and doing musical projects. Success being defined as achieving the set goal and having completed the project. Their purpose was never to selfpromote and the activity rarely involved creating art. So maybe art is a niche that is never finished... Mid next year, I want to pick up writing a blog. The primary purpose is to 'keep myself busy' because I have never delved into this activity and I am curious about the process. The secondary purpose is to improve my literacy: I want to be able to read and write more efficiently, because my new job will require that. And the tertiary goal is to self-promote. Elaborating on the topic of finishing projects would make a perfect first article. Thanks to the author for your inspiration! |
I sew clothes. The vast majority of projects I start get finished. Sometimes I'm happy with the result, sometimes I'm not. I wear them regardless. My kids wear them. After a while they grow out of them.
Goal achieved, project finished.