The Closed Circuit
Playbook #466 — CuongFBI

Playbook #466 — Doctrine tier

The
Closed
Circuit

Focus Doctrine for People Who Can’t Go to the Cabin

Mạch Kín — Học thuyết tập trung cho người không thể trốn lên núi

Fig. 1 — Three components in series Circuit assumed closed — run the diagnostic
A closed circuit with three components in series: Clear, Guard, Endure. Clear R1 — ALLEN Guard R2 — NEWPORT Endure R3 — DUCKWORTH YOU — THE SOURCE

Three components, one loop. Series wiring has no mercy: open any single leg and current stops everywhere — not just at the break. That is the whole argument, drawn.


The load-bearing logic — complementary failure

Three books.
Three holes.

Any three books can be stapled together. These three fuse, because pulling one out breaks something specific — and because each one's failure is the next one's specialty. That test is why these three and not others.

Allen
Getting Things Done — 2001
Has no priority

GTD is famously value-neutral. It is a magnificent engine bolted to no steering column. It will help you execute the wrong life with beautiful efficiency, on time, with a clean inbox.

Newport
Deep Work — 2016
Has no inbox

Deep Work assumes the noise is already handled. He tells you to go to the cabin. He does not tell you how to leave the desk — and most people cannot leave the desk.

Duckworth
Grit — 2016
Has no method

Grit is a diagnosis wearing a prescription's clothes. It describes the winners after the fact. "Be gritty" is what you say to someone who already was.

ClearGuardEndure
Allen's hole is Duckworth's specialty. Newport's hole is Allen's specialty. Duckworth's hole is Newport's specialty. Close the loop or nothing runs.


Page four of the book — printed before you owe me anything

Where each of them beats me

This table is in the front matter of the book, not the back. Every one of these three writers beats me at the thing they built their life around. I concede it in print, on page four, before you have paid me a dollar or an hour. Then I will show you the ground none of them will hold.

Swipe the table → the last column is the point

Fig. 2 — Honest comparison, conceded up front
On this groundAllenNewportDuckworth#466
Capturing every open loopWins. Nobody is close.SilentSilentDefers to him
The case for depthSilentWins. Definitive.SilentDefers to him
The research on persistenceSilentSilentWins. It's her lab.Defers to her
Deciding what the work is forDeclinesAssumes itAssumes itHolds it
Focus with a bell on the doorNot his readerNot his readerNot her readerHolds it
Interrupted every four minutesNot addressedContradictedNot addressedHolds it
When the interruption is the businessNot addressedNot addressedNot addressedHolds it

Allen writes for knowledge-work managers. Newport writes for tenured academics and people who can disappear for a month. Duckworth writes for West Point cadets and spelling-bee children. Not one of them will ever write for an owner-operator with a bell on the door and no ability to go anywhere — or for an immigrant family where the interruption is the business. That is the ground none of them will hold. So I took it.

Outflank Codex: never assault a stronger competitor head-on. Intercept their mechanics and redeploy downhill into the audiences they refuse to serve.


The instrument — six tools

Two free forever.
Not a teaser.

The Circuit Diagnostic and the Bell Log are complete, unblurred, uncapped, and free for as long as this page exists. They are the two that hand you the truth about your own day. You need buy nothing. That sentence is printed in the book as well, because a lead magnet that lies is just an ad with a longer runway.


The volumes

Four books.
One box.

Volume one — doctrine

The Closed Circuit

Mạch Kín — Vietnamese edition, diaspora register

Twenty-eight chapters in four books. Books I–III re-derive Allen, Newport and Duckworth from the ground up — zero quotation, not one sentence of any source. A synthesis that quotes is a summary. A synthesis that re-derives is a book. Book IV is the circuit, and it is the biggest, because it is the only part nobody else could write.

~44,750 words EN  /  ~48,800 VI
~172 pages  /  46% re-derivation, 54% circuit
English: CuongFBI  /  Việt: PhạmZuy CườngFBI
Volume two — companion

The Paper Circuit

Mạch Giấy — the analog stack

All six tools, on paper. Because a woman behind a nail desk cannot open a laptop between clients, but she can keep a book open next to the register and put a mark in it when the bell rings. Newport's reader has a cabin and a monitor. Mine has eleven inches of counter. If the power goes out, if the servers go dark, if there is no phone — the doctrine still runs.

EN + VI  /  every page a paper tool
Every tool produces a decision, never a rep
Book IClearAllen Has No Priority5 ch. · ~6,500 w
Book IIGuardNewport Has No Inbox5 ch. · ~6,500 w
Book IIIEndureDuckworth Has No Method5 ch. · ~6,500 w
Book IVThe Bell on the DoorThe ground none of them will hold13 ch. · ~22,750 w

Asymmetric weight is not decorative. Fifteen chapters re-derive books the internet has already summarised to death. Thirteen chapters hold ground nobody else has walked on. The word count follows the argument, not the symmetry.

ELITE tier — six tools, AI-powered. 3-day trial.


The honest handoff — also printed in the back of the book

Go buy all three.

I don't fear the comparison. I invite it. This book names all three of them on nearly every page it owes them, and quotes not one word of any of them. Here is where to spend your money after mine — or instead of mine.

Allen
Getting Things Done

Buy it for the capture habit. There is no substitute and there has never been a better book on getting the open loops out of your skull and onto a surface you trust.

Newport
Deep Work

Buy it for the argument. He proves depth is economically and morally serious better than anyone alive. He is right. He is also not writing to you.

Duckworth
Grit

Buy it for the evidence. The research is real, careful, and hers. Read her data and ignore anyone who turned it into a slogan — starting with the people who sell it back to you.


The Sumo-Librarian series — #466 is the doctrine above it

Five drill books.
One doctrine.

Those five teach the reps. This one does not repeat a single one of them. The line I hold, and you can hold me to it: if it has a rep count or timer, it belongs to the drill book. If it produces a decision, it belongs here. Those train the muscle. This aims it.

#453

Memory

Serves Endure
#456

The Zen Squirrel

Serves Guard
#457

The Lightning Sloth

Serves Clear
#458

The Blind Detective

Serves Clear
#459

The Calm Berserker

Serves Guard

The rest of the bench

What else I do

Tool