Although David Allen’s article in the business section of the New York Times – When Technology Overwhelms, Get Organized – was targeted to workaholics who cannot keep up with the bombardment of email, project deadlines, text messages, meetings – so that they “can’t get any real work done” – the challenge to be productive and streamlined enough to have time to think could apply to anyone – employed or otherwise occupied. Allen’s maxims work simply:
- Capture everything in writing, but don’t stop at the list.
- Decide what each item means to you, and if any actions are required. “Any action that cannot be finished in two minutes should be done in the moment.”
- Organize remaining items into a to-do list that you park in a convenient spot.
- Regularly review and reflect on your commitments and interests to update your list.
- Finally, do it – now, if you can.
No longer plagued by a restrictive work schedule, I still have the work ethic. Organizing gives me that spring cleaning restorative, but taking on projects that are meaningless may not be satisfying, e.g., creating a database of programs presented at a local lunching group – no one really cared. Allen’s directives focused on the value of organizing for one’s self – with the caveat that functionality follows productivity.
The inspiration led me to reorganize the No Charge Bookbunch website – a little – reviewing titles, reorganizing genre, creating links. The result? I found some old favorites I had forgotten I’d read, edited some reviews that needed the red pen, and generally felt better at the end – and then closed my computer for a day, and took a walk.
According to Allen, “making life less stressful” is not about “downgrading to …something simpler…but to participate productively {in the world of technology} and not be paralyzed by it.”