I disagree. I think the interesting part is in the blanks in most graphics. He does a very good job at keeping his computer use to work hours, so I think it's safe to assume he has a life outside work. He sends a good amount of texts which means he has people in his life. He drinks coffee mostly in the morning which is good.
I'm not trying to say he has a "bad" life or is doing a "bad job" at something. But he seems to be saying that these things are meaningful as a representation of a year in his life. It's not bad to text or drink coffee or ride the bus, but I wouldn't want to think of a year in my life in these terms.
Just because these metrics show evidence of how his time was spent, doesn't mean that's how he thinks of the year. He might think of it as time spent staying connected with far-away friends, while writing awesome code for a company he loves.
As a parent, I have often wondered how much of my time is spent changing diapers, getting water/milk/juice for my kids, overseeing clean-up time, doing bathtime, reading, etc. I'd love to be able to look at a metric of this over the course of a year. If, at the end of the year, I had an annual report which included all of that (and work time), it would be very interesting to me as a way to understand my life better. I already think of myself as a parent, and know that these are the costs of being one, but that's not the only way I think of my life in a year.
Exactly. The reality is that we do spend most of our time doing rather mundane things, but that's not a bad thing. Characterizing a year in those terms is often really useful, and always interesting!
I guess. However, rather like any organization, I think it's good to review what has actually constituted the activities of a year.
I think there's some utility, and certainly some novelty in taking a very frank look at what you've done in a year. I'm sure that there are short, personal moments and achievements from this year that define it for him. Lessons learned, moments of growth, of love, of victory and of failure.
However, this is looking not at the interesting individual moments, but at the more mundane (but plentiful) every day things.
Given that, I'd love to see a follow up post of what the year meant to the OP on a more personal level. A blog post that covers those moments of growth, love, learning, and victory.
I disagree. No matter how interesting and meaningful our lives are much of our day is spent doing these relatively normal, mundane tasks. I don't think that necessarily has to be depressing. It's actually a really interesting way to analyze a life and I'd really be interested in producing my own annual report.
I would think that the fun and interesting events of his year are the ones that don't need this kind of reporting to remember or get insight into. Everyone has mundane parts of their life, and with this report, now even those parts are kind of interesting.