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Monday, January 19th, 2026

A man playing tin whistle, a woman playing concertina, and a man playing guitar.

Monday session

Sunday, January 18th, 2026

Lots of fiddlers with the occasional banjo and tin whistle playing round a pub table.

Sunday session

Saturday, January 17th, 2026

A man playing pipes and a woman playing fiddle at a kitchen table.

Saturday afternoon kitchen session

Friday, January 16th, 2026

A very cute little doggo on someone’s lap in the pub.

Kitty, the session dog!

Thursday, January 15th, 2026

A man playing flute accompanied by a man playing Greek bouzouki in a nicely decorated pub.

Thursday session

Tuesday, January 13th, 2026

The dramatic poster for Paul Thomas Anderson's film but the title now reads: Wombat Laughter An Udder.

The best film I saw in the cinema in 2025 was definitely…

Monday, January 12th, 2026

3 + 4

Toward the end of 2021, I wrote about working a four-day week. It really suited me. So much so that I’ve gone one further. For the past year or so I’ve been working a three-day week.

I work on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. From Friday to Monday, my days are my own.

This really changes the dynamic of the week. It no longer feels like an extended weekend. What I mean is that usually we think about the working week as the default and the weekend as the exception. That’s been flipped on its head for me. The three days I spend working feel like the exception.

Once again, this decision meant earning less money. But I’ve decided that I value time more than money. I know that’s a privileged position to be in. Many people have to expend all their time in order to make just enough money.

I’ve made some choices along the way that certainly help. I don’t have children. I don’t have a car. I live in a modest flat and I’ve paid off the mortgage. I live in a country where healthcare is free.

So I don’t have too many expenses. My biggest expenses are travel-related; getting to the States to see family, or travelling to Irish music festivals wherever they may be.

But still, working a three-day week means I can make enough to cover my expenses and still put some money aside for the future.

Now, this wouldn’t work for everyone. My work tends to be the kind that doesn’t require much direct collaboration (which is also why I mostly work from home). I imagine it could get frustrating being on a team of people working different numbers of days.

I’m also really lucky to have the choice to do this. I know that many workplaces wouldn’t allow this kind of lifestyle. Clearleft is different.

In my last conference talk, I touched on this:

I think you could you could divide management into two categories like you can do with programming languages. There is a very imperative school of management where it’s all about measurements, it’s all about those performance reports, it’s all about metrics, time tracking. Maybe they install software on your machine to track how long you’ve been working. It’s all about measuring those outputs.

That’s one approach to management. Then there’s a more declarative approach, where you just care about the work getting done and you don’t care how people do it. So if they want to work from home, let them work from home. If they want to work strange hours, let them work strange hours. What do you care as long as the work gets done? This is more about giving people autonomy and trust.

I’m very happy that Clearleft takes the declarative approach.

And I can reiterate what I said when I stopped working on Fridays:

I haven’t experienced any reduction in productivity. Quite the opposite. There may be a corollary to Parkinson’s Law: work contracts to fill the time available.

Now that I don’t work on Mondays, bank holiday weekends don’t mean much to me anymore. Or to put it another way, every weekend is like a bank holiday weekend. If I want to travel somewhere on a Friday and come back on a Monday, I don’t need to book any time off. That’s really nice.

I’ve got four days in a row to do with as I wish. I had to fight the urge to immediately launch into some new project or side-hustle to fill the time. I’m savouring it instead.

I’ve got time to take care of The Session. I’ve got time to read. I’ve got time to cook. I’ve got time to spend learning Irish. Mostly I’ve got time to just be.

Wednesday, January 7th, 2026

A selfie in a row of musicians.

Sessioning

A fiddler, an accordion player and a mandolin player round a table with a fiddle on it.

Wednesday session

Tuesday, January 6th, 2026

A man playing tin whistle and a man playing fiddle.

Tuesday session

An ornate poster with multiple fonts that reads: Concerns about...Harms of AI?...Corruption and big tech?... Social media and mental health?... Surveillance? Come speak and listen at Brighton Ludd Club Every first and third Friday of the month 7.45pm at the Cowley Club 18+, members and guests welcome brightonluddclub.org With skill-sharing, book-sharing, speakers, meet-ups and events.

I may have found my people.

Monday, January 5th, 2026

Two concertina players and a guitarist playing at a pub table in the corner.

Monday session

Friday, January 2nd, 2026

A smiling woman playing fiddle next to a man playing banjo at a pub table with a fiddle on it.

New year’s day session.

Sunday, December 28th, 2025

A cute doggo snoozing in a comfy dog bed.

Good night!

Saturday, December 27th, 2025

Looking down a road flanked by dry scrub with mountains in the distance under a blue sky speckled with clouds.

On the road in Arizona.

Thursday, December 25th, 2025

A sweet dog wearing a red vest gnawing on a chew-toy in front of a Christmas tree festooned with ornaments.

Nollaig shona daoibh go léir, a chairde!

A very sweet white and brown dog curled up on the sofa.

Christmas with Sandy

Monday, December 22nd, 2025

A snoozy dog all curled up.

Sleepy Sandy

Saturday, December 20th, 2025

Looking at a wide rectangular window onto multiple landing strips, one of which has a plane on it, on a clear day.

Waking up in an airport hotel room with a runway view.

Thursday, December 18th, 2025

A man playing tin whistle and a man playing fiddle in a pub.

Thursday session