I find holidays annoying because flights are intolerable, and being always on the move is exhausting. But because it is jam-packed with touristy activities, holidays force me not to work and spend time with the family.
But I am not always "there." My body automatically shuts down during flights, and there exists downtime between activities. These downtime lets me catch up on the long-form article backlog that I have accrued in my Pocket app; to finish a book, but mostly – to ruminate.
Meditation
Hipsters like to be fancy. They gave the act of idling a word – meditation. In my downtime, I let my mind wander. If I am not focused on performing grunt work (such as writing specs or participating in a conversation), my mind wanders.
My mind wanders to nowhere. I think this is good because when I am not thinking about anything, in particular, my mind occupies itself. In turn, it forms connections between concepts and ideas.
This is also the worst part of car ownership. Now that I drive, I get to places faster; and my mind is not able to idle.
The most important job for a CEO is thinking
Specifically, creative thinking. I cannot force creativity. Coffee hones my focus, so it reduces creativity. I need creative thinking because as a CEO, I have two responsibilities:
To keep the company growing
Growth comes in spurts. In between spurts, doing the average thing will lead to nothing but a flat line. So I have to get back to the drawing board and figure out what is the next driver of growth. It helps if I can map empathy for the users, with a business model that carries a fat profit margin, coupled with a fantastic story for the press to jump on.