Question
How do I practice agent maintenance schedule?
Quick Answer
List your five most important cognitive agents — habits, routines, systems, or recurring commitments. For each one, write down: (a) When you last deliberately reviewed whether it was still working as designed. (b) What maintenance cadence it should have — monthly, quarterly, or semi-annually —.
The most direct way to practice agent maintenance schedule is through a focused exercise: List your five most important cognitive agents — habits, routines, systems, or recurring commitments. For each one, write down: (a) When you last deliberately reviewed whether it was still working as designed. (b) What maintenance cadence it should have — monthly, quarterly, or semi-annually — based on how fast it can drift. (c) A specific calendar date for its next scheduled review. If you cannot remember the last time you reviewed any of them, that is your finding: you have been running without a maintenance schedule, and whatever degradation has occurred has gone undetected.
Common pitfall: Treating a working agent as a finished agent. The most common maintenance failure is not neglecting broken systems — it is neglecting functional ones. When something is working, there is no pain signal to trigger a review, no crisis to force attention. So the agent runs unexamined until it degrades past the threshold of noticeable dysfunction. By then, the cost of repair is much higher than the cost of the scheduled check that would have caught the problem early. The deeper failure is confusing the absence of visible problems with the presence of health.
This practice connects to Phase 30 (Agent Lifecycle) — building it as a repeatable habit compounds over time.
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