Comfy clothes, favourite tools and the Three Horizons

You probably have a favourite piece of clothing to put on and put you at ease. Maybe a hoody, a jumper, … a favourite onesie. 

When something fits, you wear it with ease, you move with it, you even forget it’s there, it becomes an extension of you.

The same is true of hand tools*. When we learn to use a hand tool, in the early stages, the tool may feel unfamiliar and the action strange. We think about the tool as much as what we are trying to create. But as the feel and the action become familiar, the tool seems to disappear from site, and instead we are just looking at the work. 

These ideas of comfort, fit and adoption are helpful for thinking about how well conceptual tools and models work. A good model is one that is easy to pick up and start using. One that quickly gets beyond thinking about the model and to doing better work.

The Three Horizons model is one of the mainstays of our Toolkit for Regenerative Design, and it has the characteristics of a well-worn tool. People seem to pick it up with surprising ease. I hear people quickly adopting the language of different horizons — talking about Horizon Three dreams, Horizon One realities and Horizon Two opportunities. 

Maybe it fits because it speaks to very human experiences. I think many people recognise times when they have inhabited each of these mindsets, sometimes at the same time.

And because it fits, it gets out of the way — and easily opens up a conversation about our hopes, our realities and our best possible next steps.

*When I write about our relationship to tools and how we think, I’m usually channeling Matthew Crawford’s book, The World Beyond Your Head.

Ultra-processed information

It’s super quick to absorb. 

Cheaply available. 

It bares little resemblance to its source. 

Its ingredients can come from anywhere. 

The growers are anonymous. 

Put together using processes you don’t understand.

It is optimised for what you crave rather than what you need.

And like other ultra-processed things:

It doesn’t quench your hunger.

It’s addictive. 

Easy to binge on.

But can be strangely unsatisfying. 

But we don’t just think with our heads — we think with our whole bodies. 

We process information by moving through the world, interacting with the environment, relating to other people, remembering through different neural centres in the body. Thinking has physical and emotional dimensions alongside the cognitive that are part of how we have evolved to make sense of the world.

When we are more active seekers of information rather than passive consumers:

  • We have to seek out what we need, creating relationships with sources, with people, with places. 
  • The process takes time, which gives us time to think.
  • We give the opportunity for our full range of bodily thinking circuits to participate. 
  • The inputs require chewing on, and this gives us time to discern what need.

The process is slower but the outcome is more nourishing.