3 Reasons to Be and Stay Lazy
(Source/Credits: https://dev.to/zoebourque/3-reasons-to-be-and-stay-lazy-2m8n)
I’m a lazy person (let’s be honest here, who isn’t). Though my parents keep telling me ever since I...
I’m a lazy person (let’s be honest here, who isn’t).
Though my parents keep telling me ever since I turned 18 that it’s a very bad habit, I’m confident that it’s the key to a better life, and a better future.
Here are my reasons:
1. Save Time
Being lazy means you will find ways or means to get more things done in lesser time efficiently.
If I can express my feelings in two words, I wouldn’t use three; if I can make a delicious grilled cheese sandwich in three steps, I wouldn’t make it four.
Or if I want to create a detailed list of my favorite restaurants in the city, I wouldn’t bother writing it down in a notebook, like my non-tech savvy auntie did.
With so many top task management software out there, including Asana, Basecamp and Quire, it’s actually quite easy to do so.
2. Less Waste
Being lazy means you are less likely to buy stuff, and thus less likely to throw them away.
I remember two years ago, I had to move from an apartment to another every three months, and with each time that I moved, I carried lesser and lesser belongings with me.
Now, I find myself disliking the idea of buying more goods, since it always makes me feel like adding unnecessary weight onto my shoulders.
Why buy a new T-shirt when you’ve already got enough to wear for one week? It’d be like having the extra credit card that you’ll never use in your purse.
3. More Fun
Once you save yourself time and energy, it’s no doubt that you’ll have more time for other things and people.
For example, you can have dinners with your families, watch DVDs with your friends, go camping with your dog, and even learn something new.
In all, I think laziness is a good thing.
If you’re like me, you like getting things done fast without burdening yourself and still having the time for activities and games, let’s be lazy, or stay lazy.
Comments section
rubdottocom
•May 1, 2024
Disagree, do things in less steps is not always the best way to do it.
Talking about software development you can do crazy things with a single line of code and it would no recommend you to do it.
Talking about cooking, the tastiness of many recipes it depends on how many steps or how many time do you invest on cooking, so I'll suggest you to enjoy some slow food and cooking.
About waste, ok, but is not about being lazy is about being practical. At last, in the case that you are analyzing, the need to be more nomad.
And… GTD, really? I don't know a more complicated system to organize yourself than GTD, so well, GTD is great… but a really lazy person is the contrary of GTD
chriswiseformat14
•May 1, 2024
I couldn't agree more, in fact describing myself as a lazy developer and explaining why it's a good thing was something I'd even go as far as to do in interviews.
vicky209
•May 1, 2024
Being lazy helps me being more creative! Great article!
kylefilegriffin
•May 1, 2024
There is a big difference between the laziness of wanting to find an optimal solution so you can achieve a result faster, and the laziness of not wanting to code at all (procrastination). To engineer a non-verbose but efficient function/block of code, we need a proper burst of effort and thinking to achieve this. It's a product of laziness but it still requires one to be in the correct mindset.
jankapunkt
•May 1, 2024
Being lazy: write less, but reusable, code.
tttfifo
•May 1, 2024
Hi Zoebourque,
I like this so much!
At the beginning of my career (I was a SysAdmin) I was so lazy, that I learned to write scripts - bash, perl, windows .bat files, python... I was so happy that my scripts are doing my job instead of me :)
Later on my laziness brought me to become a developer. I am proud to be lazy person and I am happy about it!
Cheers!
mdhesari
•May 1, 2024
Partially true, but it will be a real problem in the future...