SOLF
We're taught to pursue focus by adding — more systems, more willpower, more hours. Subtract takes the opposite view: clarity usually comes from removing, not adding. Fewer commitments, fewer open loops, fewer priorities competing for the same attention.
This guide is a practical field manual for doing less, but better. You'll learn to see the line between what's merely good and what's genuinely essential, to say a graceful no without burning bridges, and to protect a small number of priorities from the constant pull of the urgent. It covers commitments, calendars, and the mental clutter of unfinished decisions — with concrete steps for clearing each.
None of it asks you to become a monk or abandon your responsibilities. It's a calm, repeatable way to make room for the few things that deserve your best attention — and to feel the quiet that arrives when the noise is gone.
You'll learn to
- Tell the difference between what's merely good and what's genuinely essential
- Cut competing priorities down to a focused, protectable few
- Say a graceful 'no' without damaging your relationships
- Clear the mental clutter of unfinished decisions and open loops
- Protect your best attention from the constant pull of the urgent
- Keep a simple weekly practice so commitments don't quietly creep back
What's inside
- Chapter 1 — The case for subtraction over addition
- Chapter 2 — The essential / good / noise sort
- Chapter 3 — Auditing your commitments and your calendar
- Chapter 4 — The graceful no: principles and ready scripts
- Chapter 5 — Closing open loops and clearing mental clutter
- Chapter 6 — Protecting the essential few from urgency
- Chapter 7 — The weekly subtraction review
- Printable audit sheets and a priorities one-pager
Who it's for
Capable, overextended adults who feel scattered across too many priorities and want a calm, honest way to focus on fewer things — done well.
Format: PDF guide, ~44 pages, instant download. Includes printable audit sheets.
Educational material for personal focus and simplicity. It offers tools, not guarantees; the benefit comes from consistent practice in your own life.