Reading sequences
Learning Paths
A small set of reading sequences for readers who want a guided route rather than single pages. Each path covers a single theme over several sittings.
A learning path is a small reading sequence. It is for readers who would rather follow a route than choose between fifty pages. Each path covers a single theme, mixes guides and book notes and practices, and leaves you with a clearer sense of the area than any one page can give on its own.
Paths are not courses. There is no enrolment, no timer, no certificate, and no badge. There is just a list of pages in a sensible order, with a short note on why each one is included and what to look for when you read it.
How a path is organised
Each path follows the same shape.
- A short framing note explaining who the path is for and what it tries to leave you with.
- A first reading, usually a wiki guide, that sets the question.
- A book note that gives the topic depth.
- A practice page that turns the reading into something on paper.
- A second guide or essay that complicates the picture in a useful way.
- A short closing note with one suggestion you can carry away.
You do not need to read the path in one sitting. Most paths are designed to be spread across a week.
Current paths
Path one: a calmer week
For readers who feel that their week is running them, rather than the other way around.
- Read the Habits guide. Pay particular attention to the section on environment and friction. Most habit failures are environment failures.
- Read the book note for The 5 AM Club by Robin Sharma. Read it skeptically. The note flags what is useful and what is overstated.
- Use the Work ethic guide as a counterweight. The 5 AM Club reads as a routine. Work ethic reads as reliability. The two together are more useful than either alone.
- Finish with the essay How to boost productivity in work and life and a small action: redesign one part of your week before the next Monday.
Path two: meaning when work is in the way
For readers whose career is fine on paper but quietly hollow.
- Start with Happiness. The page draws a useful distinction between pleasure, satisfaction, meaning, belonging, and agency. Most "I am unhappy in my job" sentences are actually about meaning.
- Move to Purpose, what should I do with my life. Sit with the constraints section.
- Open the purpose worksheet and complete it slowly.
- Read the book note for Purpose by Nikos Mourkogiannis, then True North by Bill George.
- Close with the essay Perseverance, you can and you will.
Path three: a more honest relationship
For readers who want a relationship to be better but have not been able to say what better would look like.
- Read Healthy relationships and vulnerability. Read it twice. The second time is usually more useful.
- Read Effective communication. Pay attention to the section on naming a topic before discussing it.
- Use the vulnerability check.
- Read the book note for The Science of Kissing by Sheril Kirshenbaum for the biological and cultural backdrop.
- If a difficult conversation is needed, plan it. Do not improvise it.
Path four: thinking about the future of work
For readers trying to make sense of where their work fits in a changing landscape.
- Start with the book note for AI Superpowers by Kai-Fu Lee. It is the most useful single page on the site for this question.
- Read The Fourth Age by Byron Reese for the longer arc.
- Add Co-opetition and Mastering the Market Cycle for strategy and timing.
- Close with the Work ethic guide and the essay on intuition, which together give a better answer to "where does my judgement still add value" than any single book.
Path five: a quieter wellbeing month
For readers going through a low patch and looking for steady framing rather than a treatment plan.
- Begin with Anxiety mouse for the gentlest entry.
- Move to Social anxiety if relevant.
- Read Depression carefully. The page is plainly educational. It is not a substitute for professional support.
- The book note for The Body Keeps the Score by Bessel van der Kolk is dense; read it in two sittings.
- For a softer read, Start Where You Are by Pema Chödrön is a good companion.
If at any point during this path your week feels heavier rather than lighter, that is a useful signal. A reading sequence is not a substitute for talking to a qualified person.
How long should a path take
Most paths can be completed in a week if you read on three or four evenings. Stretched across two or three weeks is fine. Compressing them into a single sitting tends to flatten the value, because the practices and the reflective passes need a little time to settle.
If you only have one evening, pick the wiki guide and the practice from any path. The book notes can be added later.
Suggesting a path
If a sequence would be useful to you and is not here, the contact page explains how to suggest it. Paths are added slowly and only when there is a real reason to add them; the goal is a small set of useful routes rather than a long index.