Sunday, May 17, 2020
How to get unstuck in life
How to get unstuck in life I am a person who lives and dies by her to-do list. And right now, Im dying. Im dying because I am following all the prescribed rules except one. Here are things Im doing well: 1. I clear my inbox. I deal with each email the second I read itby responding, deleting, or transferring to my to do list. 2. I have a single list. I have As, Bs, and Cs for my priorities, so I can tell what is most important to do on any given day. 3. I make sure I have long-term goals. And I put them in my list of As. I identify the items I must get done before the end of the day. But I also add at least one non-deadline-based item that helps me reach a bigger, life-changing goal. 4. I rewrite the list every day by hand. Because if something on the list is not worth taking the time to rewrite by hand, its not worth taking the time to do. 5. I make sure I get all the As done first. Only then do I move on to less important items. Just kidding. I dont do this. But I should. Honestly, I can tell that it doesnt really matter if I follow all the other rules when Im not doing this one. Theres a book by Michael Stainer titled, Do More Great Work: Stop the Busywork. Start the Work That Matters. I know I have a problem sticking to stuff that matters: as soon as I typed the title, I thought, Why is the word that capitalized? I checked back on Amazon twice to make sure. It doesnt seem right to me. Then I tell myself I need to look up the AP Stylebook to see what the rule is. I think the is never capitalized in a title and that is optional, but I think, in this case, it looks better as lower case. Then I tell myself, look, I just really need to get this post done. If I look up the AP Stylebook, and find an answer, which is probably not going to be easy to find because honestly, Im not the queen of Google searches. Even if I manage to do that, I will not feel like I have accomplished something important today. But if I finish this post, I will feel like I am meeting an important goal of writing a post each day. Also, I tell myself that the best work I do is when I am not constantly distracted by randomly interesting searches. Like, the last time I remember doing this was, in fact, last night, when I got stuck looking up soporific. It means sleep inducing. But I thought maybe I was missing a nuance of the word because it was in a picture caption in a movie review. Who puts a word like that in a picture caption? So I thought it had another slang meaning or something. And then, when it turns out that it really does mean sleep inducing I didnt feel accomplished. It was not on my to-do list. And I cant even figure out how to slip it into my own writing. Unless you find my paragraph about soporific to be soporific. Stainers book has a chapter written by me. Which, Im sure I wrote only because I put it on my A list 400 days in a row, sending it to him, finally, ten days late. Or something like that. And he has chapters by other luminaries who I am convinced do their A list before they even eat breakfast: Seth Godin, Chris Guillebeau, Leo Babauta. The important thing about reading a book like Stainers is that if I read people telling me that I should not do bullshit work all day, then I am more likely to hold myself accountable to my A list. This problem comes down to my struggle with self-discipline. I think everyone struggles. I think theres a Maslow hierarchy of self-discipline. First you have to get out of bed in the morning. Then you have to write a to-do list every morning, and write a schedule to accommodate it. Then you have to have the self-discipline to start giving stuff up because you dont have time for everything the highest form of self-discipline is admitting that you will not be doing some things in the day. I have done all that. So what Im left with is stuff that is easy to do. But its usually Bs. And some stuff thats hard to do. Those are the As. Today I told myself no surfing. No staring at the wall. No reading my book. (Im reading Bonk, by the way, which is scintillating, and thank you to Jens Fiederer who recommended the chapter about pig orgasms that last ten minutes.) But then I saw a GChat link from Michael Roston about the Dutch parliament. I had to click. It turns out that there is a group trying to make sex with twelve-year-olds legal. So they formed a political party in order to get the laws changed. But the group dropped out of the election because they found they are spending so much time campaigning that they are losing focus of their main goal, which is to legalize pedophilia. And I thought: Dutch pedophiles are more focused on their long-term goals than I am. My problem is that I cannot write my own long-term goal in as clear a way as the pedophiles. I coach so many people who tell me they cant move forward because they dont know where they are going. And I tell them, make something up. I tell them to commit to a goal, any goal, and move toward it until you think of a better one. The act of moving toward something helps you crystallize where, exactly, you want to be moving. I wish I could tell you Im doing that, but recently Ive been writing about it more than doing it. Because Im scared. Its so scary to commit to a goal when you know its not the real goal. Success requires a leap of faith that goal setting is trial and error and the process of finding clarity not the one-time process of immaculate conception of clarity. When I was learning about to do lists, each step seemed too hard. And empty in box seemed impossible. Handwriting a to do list every morning felt absurd. But in each case, after I did it a while, it felt right and probably essential to me. So I guess I will just have to trust that if I force myself to choose a goal, my goals will get more and more clear, and the productivity piece will start falling into place.
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