What time of day am I most productive?

When this question hits

This question shows up when managing time became a substitute for deciding what matters. You've probably thought about it before, but not like this. Not with the honesty it actually requires. The easy version of the answer comes fast. The real version takes longer, and it's the one that matters.

What this surfaces

What comes up when you actually answer this: the gap between what you do for work and what the work does to you. The first answer is usually the safe one. The second answer, the one that takes longer to form, is where the pattern is. Self Reflections questions like this one work because they're specific enough that you can't hide behind a generic response.

How to sit with this

Don't answer the polished version. Answer the version you'd tell someone at 2am who already knows the context. If your answer sounds like something you'd say in a performance review, dig one layer deeper. What would you say if the job didn't matter?

Go deeper

If this question landed, the interview picks up the thread: who you were, who you are now, and the unnamed thing in between. This question belongs to Self Reflections: backward-looking questions for people who sense something shifted but can't pinpoint when. the discomfort of looking back honestly is the point. The conversation takes about 15 minutes. No account needed. Nothing stored. It uses your exact words back to you, not interpretations, and names the patterns you can't see from inside them.

Source

Dickie Bush

Not therapy. Not a chatbot. An interview that names the patterns you can't see from inside them.

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