LINEAR OS AND GREATEST LIFE?
Q: Deuce, why can’t Linear OS create total completion or get us to our greatest life?
A:
Because Linear OS is built as a progress loop, not a completion system.
It works like this: you set a goal, you take action, you get an outcome — and then the system automatically generates the next goal. That’s how it keeps you moving and improving, which is useful for daily life.
But notice something important: the loop never contains a final step where it says, “Done. Complete. Nothing more needed.” It always points forward.
So even when you reach something big — a career milestone, financial success, a personal achievement — the system doesn’t stop. It asks, “What’s next?” and starts the cycle again.
That means Linear OS is great for progress, but it’s not designed to produce a final, total sense of completion or a “greatest life” state where the search ends.
It’s like a treadmill: you can go far, you can get stronger, but the treadmill itself never becomes a finish line.