Nikhil Kabadi

Life is short. Make better decisions.

👋🏽Hi, I’m building Eibira — a mindful productivity app for making better decisions. The ideas shared here are designed to help you find clarity, choose the right regrets, and act with confidence in everyday life.

Am I Productive?

We all strive to be productive. Productivity fuels growth, drives innovation, and helps us become better versions of ourselves – but how often do we stop to reflect on what productivity means to me?

Too often, the lens through which we view productivity is fogged, distorting our understanding and blurring the line between “simply being busy” and “truly being productive”. In other words, the gap is Mindful Productivity.

So what is Mindful Productivity?

Mindful Productivity abstract art on nikhilkabadi.com

Mindful = Awareness of your feelings

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Productivity = Embracing meaningful work

Mindful Productivity is the deceptively simple act of pausing to become aware of your current feelings and bringing your whole self – mind and body, to the work in front of you.

Regularly practicing mindful productivity helps you reflect on your work and its deeper purpose. It can guide you to recognize:

  • Am I building meaningful products?
  • Am I working with ethical leadership?
  • Are my conversations elevating my thinking?
  • Am I chasing quality or quantity?
  • Do I experience flow, or am I just clocking hours?
  • Am I focusing on outcomes or titles?
  • Am I balancing learning with teaching?

As humans, we have an insultingly short time to live, and for many of us, half of it is already behind us.

Jack London quote on nikhilkabadi.com
The proper function of man is to live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days in trying to prolong them. I shall use my time. – Jack London

The choice before us is stark: do we remain perpetually busy, chasing short-term dopamine hits, or do we practice Mindful Productivity – identifying fulfilling work that allows us to live purposefully and meaningfully?

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“To suffer and not recognize that there is suffering is more painful than the burden endured by a mule carrying an unimaginably heavy load!” – Buddha

In his book The Heart of the Buddha’s Teaching, Thich Nhat Hanh shares that the first step toward understanding the Four Noble Truths is “Recognition.”

Recognition is the practice of identifying and accepting our feelings just as they are.

Similarly, the first step toward mindful productivity is to spend a two to three minutes recognizing your emotional state.

Here’s how you can take your first step toward this practice.