We talk about digital freedom as if it’s inherently good. Create anything. Store it anywhere. Name it whatever you like. The computer does not stop you.
But that’s precisely the problem.
In the physical world, constraints shaped behavior. Filing cabinets had drawers. Drawers had folders. Folders had labels. There was friction — but that friction created discipline. You couldn’t create infinite drawers. You couldn’t rename reality on a whim.
Digital systems removed those limits. And in doing so, they quietly removed structure.
We mistake optionality for empowerment. But optionality without intention produces entropy.
The cost isn’t just clutter. The cost is hesitation.
When you don’t know where something lives, you hesitate. When you hesitate, you delay. And when you delay, you doubt.
This is where structure becomes liberating.
In my conversation with Johnny Decimal, we explored how constraint — when chosen deliberately — restores clarity. His approach limits you to ten top-level areas. No sprawling folder trees. No infinite subfolders. Three levels. Stop there.
It sounds restrictive. But it isn’t. It’s focusing.
And this is where it connects deeply with Productiveness.
Productiveness isn’t about producing more. It’s about aligning intention and attention. Structure reduces the energy required to decide where something belongs. And when decision fatigue drops, presence rises.
Your digital world doesn’t need to be clever.
It needs to be calm.
And calm comes from knowing that when you go looking for something, it will be where it belongs.
That’s not about efficiency.
It’s about trust.
And trust — in your systems, in your structure, in yourself — compounds over time.
