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In 2010 I wrote 33 ways to overcome frustration, opening with the confession that I had significant personal expertise in the subject. The core argument was a reframe: frustration isn’t a problem to eliminate, it’s a signal that growth is happening. The more you can move through it rather than away from it, the more you’re actually growing. I meant it as a practical framework, not a motivational poster.
Fifteen years is a long time to test a thesis. Here’s an honest accounting.
The Angle Is Still Valid
The signal interpretation still works — but not as a general rule, only in specific conditions. When you’re frustrated because something you’re trying to do is hard, or because you haven’t yet developed the skill to do it well, the frustration is genuinely pointing at something worth pursuing. Every significant thing I’ve built or learned in the last fifteen years came packaged with frustration that, in retrospect, was just the friction of becoming capable.
But the effectiveness of those 33 tools is not a given. Some work better than others. The evergreen ones are the simplest: physical movement, changing context, time limits on sitting with the problem. None of these help me with the task at hand, but they interrupt the flow, allowing for a temporary outlet of that bottled-up energy.
The more elaborate reframing techniques tend to be hit and miss — probably useful the first time, but the mind catches on quickly and stops buying them.
Acute Frustration versus Chronic Frustration
The 2010 post assumed acute frustration — the kind that arrives with a specific problem and leaves when the problem disappears. It didn’t have a good account of chronic frustration, which is a different thing entirely and requires a different response.
Chronic frustration is the kind that doesn’t resolve because the thing generating it will never change. Something like a structural constraint you can’t remove. Or like a relationship dynamic that’s been the same for years. A gap between what you wanted something to be and what it actually is.
The “frustration signals growth” angle doesn’t apply here. If you still apply it, you’re basically shooting yourself in the foot — not only are you stuck in that frustration swamp, but you’re also telling yourself you can’t grow out of it.
The more useful frame for chronic frustration is acceptance, not reframing. Not the passive acceptance of giving up, but the active acceptance of: this is what this is, I’m going to stop spending energy trying to make it into something else. That’s a different move than the 2010 post described, and it took me longer than I’d like to admit to learn when each one applies.
Which is Which?
The most important question for finding the answer to the above is: does this come from something I’m trying to build or become — or is it attached to something I’m trying to change about reality that isn’t actually changeable?
For the first kind, I just push through. The friction is the price of the thing, and the thing is worth it.
But for the second kind, I stop. Not because I’ve given up, but because fighting an unchangeable constraint is not growth — it’s just meaningless fooling around.
I’ve gotten better at this distinction over fifteen years. I’m still not always right about which kind I’m dealing with — usually because I decide too early that something is unchangeable when it isn’t, or stay too long with something that genuinely is. But even a slightly better hit rate on this distinction saves a lot of misallocated energy.
The Frustration I Stopped Fighting
There is a version of myself I spent a long time being frustrated with — the one that moves slowly in the morning, that needs a specific kind of quiet to do deep work, that doesn’t perform well in reactive, high-stimulus environments. I tried for years to override those traits because the environments I was in rewarded people who worked differently. I treated my own operating constraints as a problem to solve.
At some point I stopped. Not because I’d grown through it, but because I finally recognized it as the second type of frustration — the kind pointing at something that wasn’t going to change.
I am who I am. And that’s ok.
📅 Then & Now — 30 Day Blog Challenge
View the challenge map →- Day 1: Answering My Own 33 Self-Interview Questions — 17 Years Later
- Day 2: What Tango Actually Taught Me About Relationships (A Decade Later)
- Day 3: Everything I Built That Fell Down (And What I Learned About Building Anyway)
- Day 4: 25 Things To Do In Your Life – Then And Now
- Day 5: The Action/Reaction Trap: Why I Had It Half Right in 2009
- Day 6: Boredom Is a Feature, Not a Bug — And We've Almost Deleted It
- Day 7: Raw Food in 2026: What I'd Tell My 2009 Self About Eating Better
- Day 8: 3 Lifestyle Design Blueprints I've Lived (Plus a 4th One That Works Best These Days)
- Day 9: 100 Ways to Live a Better Life — 17 Years After: What Actually Worked
- Day 10: 17 Years of Social Networks Later: What Actually Replaced What
- Day 11: Technology, Ideology, and What Actually Happened Since 2018
- Day 12: Steadily Fluid After 10 Years: How Does It Feel to Live With the Paradox?
- Day 13: The First 6 Months of Blogging After 17 Years of Blogging
- Day 14: 15 Years of Motivation: From Tiny, Genuine Sparks to Burning Out
- Day 15: The Right Tool for the Job in 2026: What AI Changes About the Wrench Problem
- Day 16: 7 Kung Fu Panda Lessons, 16 Years Later — What Po Actually Got Right
- Day 17: 77 Things I Still Want to Do, 13 Years Later — and What I've Crossed Off
- Day 18: How I Actually End My Day in 2026 - Compared with 2011
- Day 19: 7 Things To Do When the Shit Hits the Fan — 15 Years Later
- Day 20: Living as a Digital Nomad: Revisiting a 16-Year-Old Primer
- Day 21: 7 Reasons to Enjoy Life More — 16 Years Later
- Day 22: 77 Reasons to Love Your Life — Why I'd Write This Differently After 17 Years
- Day 23: The Diamond Cutter, 12 Years Later — Buddhism as a Daily Practice
- Day 24: Life Has No Meaning - In 2026 I Still Think This Is Good News
- Day 25: The Ancestor Syndrome - Revisiting Inherited Money Beliefs 10 Years After
- Day 26: Why I'm Still Learning to Say No (17 Years After Writing About It)
- Day 27: Frustration as a Growth Signal - Revisiting After 15 Years
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