Preface: This article was intended as a question for the GTDgroup@Yahoo. But it turned out to be some sort of therapeutic writing session for my own self. I decided to share it with you. Maybe it can be of any help, maybe you have tips, pointers or similar experiences. Please, feel free to respond! This evening, I was flipping some pages in Ready for anything when one sentence hit me. It’s on page 27: Trust that you’ll see the option again whenever you need to reassess The chapter talks about putting stuff into In and review it on the Weekly Review. Now, what hit me was this… I try to use GTD both at work and at home. At work, slowly but surely, things start to run more smoother and the system starts to work. Still have troubles with Weekly reviews and really do some tasks from my NA list instead of jumping from one loose end to another but I’m trying. But…I don’t have a trusted system at home! I do have my own Inbox next to my desk. I put all mail, bills and other papers in it during the week. And every monday, I go through them, file it, decide some NA’s (call someone, make a note, send some mail) or pay the bills. I have a sort of tickler-file but I don’t look at it every day. Simply because I am not at my desk at home every day. The best place to put the ticklerfile is at my desk because most of the stuff in it requires me to be at my desk, with PC, telephone, other administration at hand. I also don’t have a filecabinet. Very simple: Don’t have room for it. I do have a lot of D-Ring Binders with old correspondence and other reference material. Now, the biggest issue is this: At home, in no place, there is something that keeps my Next Actions. I have absolutely no trusted system. Why? I don’t know. But all I have is a lot of places where I think of things (in the shower, on my bike, while shopping, in the toilet) but at that moment, I don’t have the means to put it somewhere in “In” (OK, I could keep a notebook in the toilet) so I try to remember it. Or write it down in my Moleskine. But….I don’t look in my Moleskine often enough to trust it as a part of the system. Same with my Ticklerfile: Because I don’t look at it every day, unconsciously I don’t trust it as a system. Because of that, I don’t trust anything in my house to keep my Next Actions. Because I am afraid that it will go stale and those NA’s will not get done in time. Why will they not get done in time? Beause I don’t have a trusted calendar and list of items to look at every day. I do have that at work, in Outlook. But at home, in the morning, I don’t sit behind my PC to check the calendar. I also don’t have Outlook. We do have multiple PC’s and a Powerbook. On the Powerbook we keep a calendar, but again, I don’t look at it every day. Since it’s my girlfriend’s Powerbook, I also don’t feel like I should use it for my NA’s… Now, because I don’t have these trusted systems in my house, I don’t do a Weekly Review. I mean, why should I? What’s there to review? You could call my monday-evening the Weekly Review but basically that is just going through the mail, paying bills etc. [[image:190px-thinker.png::left:0]]Bottomline how I feel about it is this: I have two “spaces” that need a system: Private and Professional. These two are mixed with eachother. I think about personal stuff at work and vice versa. But I don’t want a system that deals with both those spaces. So I need seperate systems. But that sucks. Because, if you want it to work as efficient as possible, these systems should be identical. But at work, most NA’s come from email, phone and reminders (I am a strategic consultant at an internetadvertising agency). So Outlook is a good option to work with. At home, most NA’s come from conversation, things that need to be done in and around the house, actually not from email. So Outlook is not really necessary. Because there are no real NA’s at home for me to look at, at night, after dinner, I think to myself “hmmm….I could do something here like read a book, clean a room…but what should I do first?” Because of that thinking nothing gets done… Should I start the habit to open up the PC every morning to check my NA’s at home? Should I also do that at night? What about an online list of NA’s? Maybe MyTicklerFile.com is perfect after all for use at home? Maybe I should start over with GTD and really focus on implementation at home? Damn, this thinking has again opened up a closet full of surprises for me…
8 Steps to a succesfull and empty Inbox after your vacation
Quote on what GTD “is”
From the 43Folders-discussiongroup: GTD is about habits, not software. Don’t worry about what software or outliner to use. Learn the habits first and keep it simple. How true is that! More and more I come to realize that the book is not like the Ten Commandments set in stone. What it teaches you is a way of thinking about your work and your priorities. How you handle them is completely up to you. The book reaches some ideas, but I feel it is up to myself and my personal situation how I incorporate those concepts. For instance, I don’t have a deskdrawer at work where I keep my projectmaterial. Why? Because we use special envelopes with the projectplanning on them for that material. Why would I start a new habit, a new way of organizing, when all my co-workers use another way? What did happen is I change the way I approach and use those envelopes. They are on my desk, but in a ordened manner and I can quickly find the stuff I need. New material goes directly in the right folder instead of lingering around on my desk. This is just one example. I feel I changed a lot of little habits and are more aware of the projects and actions around me than I was before. What are your changes in habits? Do you feel more aware? Leave a comment if you do!
Right click, make task
This sure sounds interesting to me:
“[…] There are two videos up on Paul Thurrott’s SuperSite for Windows from PDC 2005 that are worth watching. The first one shows off Outlook 12’s new “to do bar,” which is viewable when you’re reading email, and the ability to right-click and automatically create a task from a message. The second one shows off the integrated RSS reader, and the rebuilt search implementation.”
Nice nice nice….
Getting Things Done next Monday
This is a reply I wrote on the GTD@Yahoo about emptying your Inbox at work. Thought I’d share it with all of you:
“ I am currently enjoying a two week holiday. Normally I have access to my workmail from home and I know from previous holidays I will check it every now and again. So this time, I decided something else. After my last day at work I asked the system administrator to change my emailpassword to something new and not tell me. So right now I can’t access my workmail. Excellent! Best thing is, because I know I can’t access it, I don’t have the pressure to check it every now and again. This leads me to the next issue: I left a week ago with an empty Inbox. Took me one friday afternoon, but I had everything covered. NA’s after my holiday, delegating current projects, filing projectmaterial. So when I arrive, I know there is some 500+ email waiting for me. I have my “Out of office” reply running until tuesday/ This means I have monday to work through this Inbox and get it to empty. After that, it’s time to check up with my co-workers :-) So to be honest, I am excited about getting back to work to see if this plan will work. I know it will!”
I will let you know next monday how it worked out!
DIY personal planner with Pocketmod
If there is one thing I absolutely admire in all the GTD-blogs, wiki’s, mailinglists and discussiongroups, it is the absolute sense of DIY to make your own life as easy as possible. Reading Getting Things Done was a (sort of) revelation for me to start with. When I read some of the hacks on 43Folders.com and started to find more and more through the various blogs and lists. One of the highlights was the whole Moleskine subculture. Well, no, the whole paperbased-culture. Those who don’t reject PDA and electronics but choose to use paper as a better and more flexible way to write down thoughts, capture actions, make appointments and remember their (mobile) life. I think the DIY Hipster PDA is the absolute highpoint of that subculture.
I tried the Hipster PDA but it wasn’t all to my likings. I had to bind the papers with a paperclip and keep it in my Moleskine. Made it all very bulky and not easy for me to use. Today I found the Pocketmod. In true Google-style, it is in beta and in version 0.3. But it looks promising. You can choose your own templates, shuffle them in your own order and print a little book of it. The website includes foldinginstructions on video, so you can try it for yourself. Absolutely a must-see and must-try for all paperlovers! The website sports their own forum so you can discuss ideas and thoughts with other afficionados. For instance to talk about combining the Pocketmod with the GTD TiddlyWiki. No really…. Pocketmod.com