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‘To
do’ lists can be deadening and demotivating. We all have things we have
to do and some of those things are routine and don’t set the world on
fire. But all too often we allow those things to take far too much time
and energy. So what can we do to transform ‘to do’ lists so we don’t get
stuck spending most of our time on the small, time-consuming stuff?
1. Think about your use of time
A
great journalling exercise I did recently was to make a huge list of
all the ways I spend my time. Then I divided the list into three groups:
essential tasks that use my skills and are enjoyable (B)
the core goals that I’m most passionate about (A)
For
me, the category C activities are things like emails and routine admin.
This includes organising book launches, doing business accounts, buying
train tickets etc.
I
estimated I was spending around 40% of my time on category C
activities. With another 40% on work, that left 20% of my time for
family, relaxation, writing … How can core goals and values be so
squeezed and thrive? Of course, they can’t. So the questions then
became, what could I eliminate? What could I automate or streamline? And
what could I delegate?
One
of the things I noticed was that I was repeating the same information
to lots of people in serial emails. I set about writing a series of
information sheets for authors. These covered what to expect during the
publishing process, information for launches etc.
They are all online and available for authors to download on a resource page.
We
added an invaluable office manager to our team at Cinnamon Press. We
employed a virtual assistant to do a routine task uploading competition
details. And I started time blocking so that emails are all answered
once a day. I batched other admin too, so I’m not wasting time going
back and forth between different types of activity.
My
category B is either work-related (editing and mentoring, for example).
Category B activities are harder to limit in some ways as they are more
essential and more enjoyable.
I
love my work, but I don’t want to be co-terminus with it. Having
supportive authors who help with these tasks makes a huge difference. I
gain a lot from editing the work of others, but I’m also grateful to
have trusted editors to delegate part of the process to.
I
get huge satisfaction from teaching and mentoring, but sharing the load
is also rewarding. I have no desire to cut the category B activities
from my timetable, but a team can achieve much more than an individual.
Once again, time-blocking enables me edit and mentor when I’m most
focussed.
And
I’m learning to say no. Loving my work does not mean I have to take on
more and more until it overwhelms me. Greg McKeown asks:
Have
you ever said yes when you meant no, simply to avoid conflict or
friction? … the very thought of saying no brings us physical discomfort.
We feel guilty. We don’t want to let someone down. … But these emotions
muddle our clarity. They distract us from the reality of the fact that
either we can say no and regret it for a few minutes or say yes and
regret it for days, weeks, months or even years.
We
all have the same amount of time each day, but how we use it makes the
difference. We can spend a bigger percentage of our time on the
important things if:
we eliminate non essential activities (no one needs to be available to a phone or messages every minute of the day)
streamline and/or delegate some of the routine activities
use blocks of time for different types of activity so you focus on the important things first and one task at a time
build a team to share the more essential and rewarding work
don’t imagine we can do it all and learn to say no
These
strategies have helped me shift from spending 40% of my time on the
routine ‘to do’ list to around 20% and I aim to get that down further
this year.
This
frees much more time for editing and mentoring, but also for my
category A activities. These include writing, travel, learning, family
time and relaxation.
2. Think about why certain activities are important to you
We
all have different goals, different category A activities that are more
‘quest’ than ‘to do’. It’s sad that the pace of life often relegates
these to the ‘add-ons’ that we hardly have any time for. But the more
passionate we are about these things, the less we will find excuses for
not doing them.
As I said in recent post:
Your goals should be your passion and, if they are, then it’s no longer a matter of forcing yourself on by dogged willpower.
It helps to know why we we value certain activities over others. This is what Benjamin Hardy advises:
Think about what it is you want, and ask yourself this simple question:
What about ___________ is important to me?
If your goal is to work from home, then ask yourself the question:
What about “working from home” is important to me?
Your answer might be something like, “to have a more flexible schedule.”
You then put THAT into the previous question.
It’s good to go at least 7-questions deep into this exercise.
Don’t overthink it. Let the answers come and move on and you’ll find your thinking is much clearer than you imagined.
For me:
Writing
is the most meaningful and transformative activity I undertake. It’s
fundamental to how I reflecting on life and connect with others.
Becoming a different story is my life’s work.
Travel puts me in unfamiliar places and situations. This in turn stimulates creativity, writing, thought and deeper work.
Family (including
an extended family of close friends) makes my world make sense. These
are the people who teach me to live from abundance rather than scarcity.
These are the people who confirm for my that generosity is the key
virtue.
Keeping fit
facilitates other goals. I’m less than 5 feet tall and have a slow
metabolism so to maintain my energy I need to be fit, of moderate
weight, flexible and well-nourished. It’s about valuing my most basic
resource: myself, so that I can give.
Personal development
is also foundational to my goals. When my daily rituals, habits,
learning, attention to values and relaxation are in harmony, the rest
follows.
If
we are clear about what matters most and why these things matter, we
are more likely to live life as an exciting quest rather than a tedious
to do list.
3. Think about building your life on values rather than ‘oughts’
When
we face a long list of things we have to do, resistance sets in. Life
becomes drudgery sustained by a diminishing supply of willpower. Even if
we manage to achieve everything on the list, we’re not likely to take
much pleasure of pride from it.
When
we manage our time by eliminating, streamlining, delegating, sharing,
time blocking and saying no, we find we have ‘more time’.
When we know what we are passionate about and why, we release energy that is much more effective than willpower.
And
when we act from our deepest values rather than ‘oughts’ imposed on us
from outside, then this energy increases beyond our imagining.
Living
from values gives us this bigger vision. Living from values comes from
intrinsic motivation rather than from something imposed on us.
As
with goals, we will each have different value sets. But something I’ve
found useful is to use a system attributed to Benjamin Franklin. He
decided on thirteen key virtues and each week of the year would focus on
one of them so that over the year he’d concentrate on each value four
times.
I’ve
written my values into a tiny book (less than two inches square) that I
can carry with me. The first two for me are generosity and abundance.
It was fascinating to spend time journalling to reach my list of
thirteen. And starting each day thinking about how I can show that value
in my life is much more motivating than starting the day thinking about
a to do list. It doesn’t mean that there are no routine jobs to do, but
it keep them in perspective.
4. Think about taking time out
When
you know how you want to live and why; when you know the values your
life rests on, life becomes a quest rather than a mundane list of
demands on your time. This is exhilarating and motivating and it demands
that we redirect our energy to what matters to us. How do we do that?
i. We need to take space to think
I’m currently rereading Virginia Woolf’s A Room of One’s Own—
it’s an important text and the idea that we need a dedicated space in
which to write is essential. Over the last week I’ve set up a dedicated
writing room in which to work. It has 23 years of past journals, all the
books I’ve bought but still need to read, and important texts that have
informed my current thinking. It’s a place I can go to think or write.
If you can’t take a whole room, find a desk, a corner, any space that
you can call your own and where you can think and write.
ii. We need to create a mindset that helps us to focus
Whatever
your daily commitments, journalling morning and evening can make all
the difference. Five minutes of writing about how you envisage your
future. Five minutes of reflecting on how you have used your time, lived
your ‘why’ or values, makes an enormous impact on how you see the world
and interact with it. Take time every day to affirm and reflect and
watch your world change.
Environment is crucial to our perspective and when we take control of it, things happen.,
iii. We need time in other environments
This
is why travel is so important to me. It places me in unfamiliar places
and stimulates creativity, writing, thought and deeper work. If you
can’t leave the country, go for a long walk; swap houses with a friend
for a week. Do something that shifts your perspective and in the
unfamiliar situation you will find yourself having new thoughts.
In short
If
you want your life to be a quest rather than a mere ‘to do’ list; and
want to make a difference, there are a few simple strategies:
think about your use of time — you have as much time as anyone else and it’s up to you how you use it.
think about why certain activities are important to you — dig deep until you find what matters to you.
think about your values and build your life around intrinsic motivation, not what someone says you ‘ought’ to do.
think
about taking time out, whether in daily journalling or unfamiliar
environments that challenge you to adopt new perspectives.
When you begin to make these changes you’ll find life is no longer a mundane to do list, but a quest of your own making. Enjoy!
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