Working With Problems
seths.blog
Working With Problems
In their book Designing Your Life, Dave Evans and Bill Burnett define “gravity problems” as obstacles or contrary forces you can’t do anything about. “If it’s not actionable,” they write, “it’s not a problem, it’s a circumstance.”
you’ll see that what started as a “Fix That Backfired” was in fact a “Shifting the Burden” system. This revealed the need to focus efforts on the fundamental problem-correcting process (the left-hand side of the diagram).
Problems are our work; we deal with them in order to survive or to improve the world, and so to face them is better than turning away from them, from burying them and denying them. To face them can be an act of hope, but only if you remember that they’re not all there is.
If it’s not actionable, it’s not a problem. It’s a situation, a circumstance, a fact of life. It may be a drag (so to speak), but, like gravity, it’s not a problem that can be solved.