zooming out
the practice of stepping back from work to see the bigger picture. one of the most consistently useful tools i've found.
what it looks like
- take a walk with someone and talk about work
- change of scenery — different room, go outside, work from somewhere new
- spend time thinking about a problem instead of just grinding on it
- step back, reflect, exercise
i'm yet to have a zoom out that was not worth it. every single one has produced something — a reframe, a decision, a clarity moment that i wouldn't have gotten while tunneled in.
when to zoom out
- when nothing is working — "backtrack like crazy" instead of pushing harder
- when you feel stuck and the instinct is to keep going
- when you realize you haven't asked "what are we even trying to do here?" in a while (see intentionality)
- when the work feels monotonous and creativity is dying
at the neurotech startup i interned at, we had a structured version of this: a "growth" subteam focused on people development, habits, and zoom outs. the formal structure made it happen regularly instead of only when desperation hit. see startup-workflow for the full cadence.
the thinking trap
spending time thinking about a problem is genuinely valuable. it gets insights you miss while tunneled. but the trap is that zooming out feels unproductive — your narratives around productivity can make you feel guilty for not typing.
the fix: recognize that zooming out is work. some of my best breakthroughs came from walks, not from screens.
connection to resets
zooming out overlaps with resets — especially the "tired" state resets like reflecting (staring into space) and going for walks. but zooming out is specifically about work clarity, not emotional regulation.