Richard P Feynman (1918â1988) was one of the most celebrated minds of the 20th Century, a theoretical physicist and professor known for his work in quantum mechanics, quantum electrodynamics, and particle physics, winning him the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1965. He also worked with Robert Oppenheimer on the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos.
But more than that, he was an incredibly curious cat. Among other things, he played drums at street parties in Brazil, he learned how to draw and subsequently tried selling his artwork to the brothels of Pasadena, and frequented many a nightclub where he worked on the art of picking up women.
He reminisced about his many life experiences in his book, Surely Youâre Joking Mr Feynman.
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One such memory pertained to choosing where to research and teach â Caltech or Cornell.
After much deliberation, he took a philosophical stance and chose Caltech.
âI decided then never to decide again. Nothing â absolutely nothing â would ever change my mind againâ, he wrote.
âWhen youâre young you have all these things to worry about â should you go there, what about your mother. And you worry, and try to decide, but then something else comes up.
Itâs much easier to just plain decide. When I was a student at MIT, I got sick and tired of having to decide what kind of dessert I was going to have at the restaurant, so I decided it would always be chocolate ice cream, and never worried about it again.
I decided I would always be Caltech.â
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But the story doesnât end there.
After rejecting Cornell, they kept pursuing him.
One of the Cornell faculty members he later met with told him that âitâs funny you didnât accept our offer at Cornwell. We were all so disappointed and couldnât understand how youâd turn down such a terrific offerâ.
But Feynman didnât know what the offer was because he never let them tell him. He didnât want it to distort his âI would always be Caltechâ philosophy and leave him with cognitive dissonance.
With this in mind, Cornell sent him a letter. He opened it and the very first sentence said âThe salary weâre offering you is $___â.
It was four times what Caltech were paying him.
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And this is where Feynmanâs playful and somewhat uncharacteristic side â for a professor of physics at least â and perhaps sincere side, given his tendency to frequent bars and enjoy the company of women, came into play.
He wrote back a letter which read:
âAfter reading the salary, Iâve decided I must refuse.
The reason I have to refuse a salary like that is I would be able to do what Iâve always wanted to do â get a wonderful mistress, put her up in an apartment, buy her nice things. . . . .
With the salary you have offered, I could actually do that, and I know what would happen to me. Iâd worry about her, what sheâs doing; Iâd get into arguments when I come home, and so on. All this bother would make me uncomfortable and unhappy.
I wouldnât be able to do physics well, and it would be a big mess! What Iâve always wanted to do would be bad for me, so Iâve decided that I canât accept your offer.â
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While a fabulous rejection letter and an amusing anecdote, there is nuanced wisdom in Feynmanâs thinking here.
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His decision to always be chocolate ice-cream and always be Caltech aligns with what psychologist Barry Schwartz dubbed the âparadox of choiceâ a good five decades later.
The paradox of choice suggests that an abundance of options stresses us out and ultimately leaves us suffering from the grass is greener complex, and never truly happy with our decisions. Schwartz argued that truly committing to an option, even an inferior one, as someone with less options might do, can make them happier and more content in the long run.
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By intentionally not letting Cornell tell him what the offer was, he was guarding his mental space from intrusions that might compromise his earlier decision to always be Caltech.
This strategy with the principles of âenvironment designâ advocated by habit-forming thinkers like BJ Fogg and James Clear.
If you want to change your habits, willpower will only get you so far â but if you change your environment, itâs much easier to develop and maintain good habits. For example, if I donât want to eat Doritoâs at 10pm while Iâm chilling out on the couch, then it would help if I didnât have any in the house.
By not letting Cornell tell him what the offer was, it was akin to not having the Doritoâs in the house, and was a form of mental environment design for Feynman, ultimately making his decision easier.
Whether playful or otherwise, he was also practicing a form of environment design when it came to cultivating a life where he could continue to be a great physicist. The emotional turmoil that might come from navigating the complexities of keeping a mistress were simply not worth it.
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Finally, with the rejection letter that he penned, he gave both himself and Cornell no real space for subsequent moves, essentially removing the pieces from the chessboard and packing it away.
By effectively burning his bridges in this way, he could continue with his commitment to Caltech without having the Cornell offer still hanging over his head.
Of course, these lessons can be applied to various dimensions of life where we find ourselves wrestling between options.
There are no doubt times when we could all benefit from:
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Steve Glaveski is on a mission to unlock your potential to do your best work and live your best life. He is the founder of innovation accelerator, Collective Campus, author of several books, including Employee to Entrepreneur and Time Rich, and productivity contributor for Harvard Business Review. Heâs a chronic autodidact and is into everything from 80s metal and high-intensity workouts to attempting to surf and hold a warrior three pose.