3 : More - Haste, Less Speed

To achieve "speed" without the "haste," use these three tactics:

One typo in a line of code or a measurement can ruin the entire output. 4. The Mental Shift

Sending a reactive email often leads to a day-long argument. Wait five minutes. 3 : More haste, less speed

Is frantic, emotional, and reactive. It focuses on the clock.

The phrase is a classic paradox. It suggests that when you rush to finish something quickly, you often make mistakes that force you to start over, ultimately taking longer than if you had just been deliberate from the start. 1. The Core Philosophy To achieve "speed" without the "haste," use these

Switch your metric from to "Progress Made." You aren't "faster" because you are sweating and moving quickly; you are faster because the task is finished correctly.

Borrowed from special forces and racing drivers: Slow is smooth, and smooth is fast. Focus on fluid, error-free movements. If you don't fumbly your keys, you get out the door faster than if you drop them twice while sprinting. Wait five minutes

Rushing through a packing list usually means buying a $50 replacement at your destination.