Shawn Blac - The Procrastinators Guide To Progress
Shawn Blac - The Procrastinators Guide To Progress
Shawn Blac - The Procrastinators Guide To Progress
GUIDE TO PROGRESS
Shawn Blanc
WELCOME
Doing our best creative work goes far beyond white-knuckle focus or ripping our
internet cable out of the wall.
How we spend our time and attention is an ever-moving target. If you could improve
your ability to do your best creative work, would you do it? What sort of return
would you reap from that over the rest of your life? How much would that be worth
to you?
For more than a decade, I have been teaching and learning about diligence and focus.
Ive spoken about these topics at conferences, taught them to my design team during
my time as a creative director, and now that I work from home running a small
network of websites, I continue to implement them in my own life every day.
This procrastinators guide to progress includes thirteen short sections adapted from
my forthcoming course, The Power of a Focused Life. I hope this guide is helpful to
you. If you want to pass it along to a friend, please feel free. Or, better yet, tell them
about The Focus Course from which this guide is based. They can get their own free
copy of the guide right here:
shawnblanc.net/focus
Again, thanks for reading.
Shawn Blanc
Shawn Blanc
MY GRANDMOTHERS ADVICE
Dont put o to tomorrow what you can do today.
That was her advice to me. To all of us. She knew tomorrow would always have
enough craziness of its own.
All through high school and college I lived the opposite of my grandmothers advice.
My actions said: why do now what I can put o until the very last minute?
One college course in particular, I remember we were given our final assignment on
the first day of class. We had the entire semester to work on it. Like a fool, I waited
until the very last few days of the semester before I began working. I had to miss
several classes, I stayed up late, and worked for nearly 48 hours straight to get my
paper finished.
Then, at about 2:30 in the morning I rushed to Kinkos to have my paper printed and
bound. Only to find a dozen of my classmates were also there, and I had to wait in
line.
When youre putting a project o (deferring it with no clear plan of attack other
than Ill get to it later), your brain wont let it go. And thus youre operating at a
sub-optimal capacity because youve got this weight of the undone project and its
undefined plan of attack. Not to mention, procrastination left unchecked will gain
momentum.
You know this. I know this. Yet still we procrastinate. Why?
My grandparents started a business well after they should have been retired. My
grandfather who lived to be 100 years old would try to break a sweat every day.
When youve got a work ethic thats bone-deep like that, having a bias toward action
is just part of everyday life.
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Over the past 15 years Ive been a freelance designer, traveling musician, a marketing
and creative director, marketing consultant, published author, and I now work for
myself running a small network of websites. In all of these areas, distractions,
frustrations, and ambiguity have been plentiful. But Ive left each one with a feeling
of joy and accomplishment.
In the pages that follow, Im going to share with you some of the ideas and methods
Ive learned for making meaningful progress on projects that matter.
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WHY DO WE PROCRASTINATE?
All sorts of reasons. Here are a few:
We lack motivation.
There are other things wed rather be doing.
We dont know what the first step to get started is.
Were afraid.
Were easily distracted.
We think we lack the resources to start / complete the task.
The project feels overwhelming.
Were stubborn.
We have a history of procrastinating, so its just the way we operate.
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How then do we beat procrastination? Is the answer to only ever work on projects
were excited about? If you were making a living from your passion, would you never
deal with procrastination again? Nope.
The adrenaline we get from fresh motivation only lasts for so long. Its awesome
while it lasts, but it comes and goes. Dont blame your tendency to procrastinate and
your lack of motivation on external circumstances.
This month (February 2015) marks the four-year anniversary of when I quit my job to
write for a living. And just a couple days ago I was asked if I ever get tired of writing.
My answer was that yes, I often get tired of writing.
When I come to the keyboard to begin writing, a million potential distractions stand
at my doorstep. There are many days when Id rather give in to one of the
distractions instead of doing my writing. But I choose not to. I write when Im tired.
I write when Im uninspired. I write when the weather outside is beautiful. I write
when Im not even sure what to write about.
I have an appointment with my keyboard every day. Every time I cancel that
appointment, it becomes that much easier to cancel it again. And then again. And
that, my friends, is a slippery slope.
One big myth about creativity is that it cannot be harnessed. That creative folks
should float around aimlessly, waiting for the muse to show up. While Im all about
being able to capture inspiration and ideas whenever and wherever they strike, Im
not about to let my creative life rest on the whims of the muse.
It is silly to think a creative person should live without routine, discipline, or
accountability.
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Heres some advice from well-known painter and photographer, Chuck Close:
The advice I like to give young artists, or really anybody wholl listen to me, is not to
wait around for inspiration. Inspiration is for amateurs; the rest of us just show up and
get to work. If you wait around for the clouds to part and a bolt of lightning to strike
you in the brain, you are not going to make an awful lot of work. All the best ideas come
out of the process; they come out of the work itself. Things occur to you. If youre sitting
around trying to dream up a great art idea, you can sit there a long time before anything
happens. But if you just get to work, something will occur to you and something else will
occur to you and something else that you reject will push you in another direction.
Inspiration is absolutely unnecessary and somehow deceptive. You feel like you need this
great idea before you can get down to work, and I find thats almost never the case.
Sure, inspiration often comes when we least expect it, and so by all means, let us
allow exceptions to our schedules. But sitting around being idle, waiting for
inspiration is a good way to get nothing done. And worse, it is also a way to let the
creative juices get stagnant.
My all-time favorite Benjamin Franklin quote is: Little strokes fell great oaks.
Everyone longs for major victories and big breakthroughs in their work. But those
would never happen if it werent for the incremental progress we make every single
day by staying committed and showing up.
In a blog post about his writing process, Seth Godin concluded with the sentiment
that there is no right way to write. He says: The process advice that makes sense to me is
to write. Constantly. At length. Often.
And, to quote Ray Bradbury: Quantity produces quality. If you only write a few things,
youre doomed.
Procrastination robs us of this. It keeps us from showing up every day. It tells us that
instead of showing up every day, we can just cram at the last minute. It tells us that
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there is always tomorrow. It lies to us, saying that just because were ignoring this
task again and again doesnt mean weve quit.
The only dierence between a quitter and an habitual procrastinator is that the latter
is lying to herself.
Therefore, procrastination is one of the greatest enemies to producing meaningful
work. Because not only does procrastination keep us from doing the work, but in so
doing, it also robs us from the process of sitting down every day to be creative. Its in
the day-to-day mundane and dicult work of showing up that our ideas take shape
and take flight. Its in that place that our skills are forged bit by bit.
The path to success (both in our career and in accomplishing our life goals) is rarely
glamorous. Its usually mundane and repetitive. Underachievers will waste their time
daydreaming about when their big break will come while they procrastinate doing
work they dont see as important.
Meanwhile, true achievers will do the work, day in and day out, with vision and
strategy. I once read that successful people dont work harder than unsuccessful
people; they work much, much harder.
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There are four things vital to your success which you build by showing up every day
to do your creative work:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Courage
Momentum
Your skill set
Your audience
So
If fear is what keeps us from doing work that matters, procrastination is what keeps
us from reaching our potential.
As well get to in a bit, there are many ways to beat procrastination. But if I had to
boil it all down to just one piece of advice the first step toward beating
procrastination in terms of doing something else instead of making and creating I
would say this:
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broken commitments, consider the new project may not be fulfilled and
decide that full eort is not required.
If you continually break commitments you almost bind yourself totally from
completing anything because there is no track record of success in your
subconscious.
If it helps, make less commitments to yourself but follow through completely
on even the most frivolous. Its not so stupid to start by placing your shoes in
exactly the same position each night without fail. Do this irrespective of
what time you get home or how you feel from one day to the next. As crazy
as this seems it will actually increase your sense of integrity. You will prove to
yourself that you can keep a long-term commitment at the most menial level.
There is a good, common practice when it comes to debt elimination called The
Debt Snowball. The goal of The Debt Snowball is to pay o all your credit card and
consumer debt as quickly as possible. In some cases this could take several months if
not several years, and so it can be easy to lose momentum along the process.
Many people think they should try to pay o the credit cards which have the highest
interest rate first. But there is a better way.
To do The Debt Snowball, you put your credit cards in order of balance: with the
card holding the smallest balance first and the one with the highest balance last.
Then, while still paying the monthly minimum payment on each card, take all extra
money you can and pay o that first card (the one with the smallest balance) as fast
as possible.
Congratulations! Youve now eliminated one of the cards you owe money on. Feels
great, doesnt it?
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Now, take the money you were using to pay o that card and roll it over to the next
card until that one is paid o.
As you can see, the momentum builds as you pay o each card. You feel good about
the small victories, and you feel less stress as you have less cards you owe money on.
This method of The Debt Snowball is a great picture for how we can rebuild our
personal integrity in terms of being able to follow through with our commitments.
Just like many people think the best way to pay o their credit cards is to start with
the ones that have the highest interest rate, so too do we think that if we are going to
make a change in our life it should be a big change in a substantial area of life.
We want to eat healthier, begin exercising daily, create a comprehensive financial
budget for our household, write a novel, start a business, etc. These are all wonderful
goals. But for many people, these goals will never be realized. Not just because
theyre prone to distraction and procrastination, but because they have a history of
not being able to see their commitments through to the end.
And so, in the same way that the Debt Snowball has you starting with the credit card
with the lowest balance, why not regain your personal integrity and develop a habit
of commitment by starting small and simple. In the quoted passage above, Peter
Daniels suggests placing your shoes in exactly the same spot each night without fail.
Do that for a month as a simple way to prove to yourself that you can make and keep
a commitment.
It can be frustrating to start small with our goals. But making small commitments
and keeping them is how we build the momentum we need to be people who keep
our commitments. Its a way to rebuild our personal integrity. And in so doing, well
see much greater results over the long run.
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A friend calls you up, says she has two tickets to go see a movie, and asks if you
want to go. Your only decision is yes or no.
2. Or, suppose that same friend calls you up and simply asks if you want to go hang
out. Assuming you say yes, now you have to decide what to do. Go see a movie,
go bowling, go to a museum, go out to eat (fast food or sit down), etc. The
options are endless
Last week my wife surprised me. In the morning before I began my work day she
told me that she had booked a babysitter and made reservations at a restaurant. The
only choice I had to make was if I wanted to go or not of course I did. And did I
care where we were going? No, not at all. The decision had been made for me and it
was simple to accept it and enjoy the night out.
I got to go on a date, and all I had to do was show up. How easy is that?
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Oftentimes the easiest, laziest thing we can do is just accept the choice thats been
made for us. Which is why if youre waiting until its time to begin work before you
make a choice about what to work on, the choice is much harder. Instead, make the
choice for yourself ahead of time and capitalize on your own laziness. Why not!?
Try this:
1.
Today, at the end of your day, write down the one thing you need to get done
tomorrow. Not necessarily an urgent task with a deadline, but rather an
important one. A task you need to accomplish in order to keep making progress
on a project.
2. Now, decide when youre going to do that task. Preferably, it will be the first
thing you work on tomorrow.
See? Now your current self is making the choice for your future self. Right now, when
you can think clearly and make an unbiased decision about tomorrow, is the perfect
time to make a decision about the first thing youre going to do.
If your biggest challenge to focus is the tyranny of choice, then make the choice
ahead of time. Then, stay true to your choice.
If you have trouble keeping your own commitments, and following through with your
own choices, then re-read the previous chapter on getting back your own personal
integrity.
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A Commitment to Honesty and Clarity. This means we dont shy away from
the truth of who we want to be, where we are, where we want to go, what
capacity we hold, what we want to build, and how we will build it. Dont shy away
from being honest with yourself and finding clarity about your vision, values,
goals, and resources.
2. A Bias Toward Action: This is doing the work. Showing up every day. Focusing
on whats important but not necessarily urgent. Getting things done.
If youre familiar with Stephen Coveys 7 Habits, youll see that this sums up the first
three habits, but especially so the 2nd the habit of beginning with the end in mind
is all about the balance between leadership and management.
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Covey writes about how things are created twice: first there is the idea and then
there is the manifestation of that idea. First we build with our imagination, then we
build with our hands. Both stages of creating are vital because we need both clarity
and action.
Too much focus on ideas and well never do the work. But too much focus on staying
busy and we may find ourselves spinning our wheels without making progress or
creating anything of value.
***
It is true that our heroes have possibly forgotten the exact path they took (because it
was 10 or 20 years ago for them), or that the landscape is dierent now than it was
then, or just the fact that we and our heroes are altogether dierent people with
dierent life circumstances, etc.
When we glean from those whom we look up to, the goal is not to peek at their todo list and agenda. Rather, we should glean from their values, their approach to
problem solving, and their work ethic.
I believe well find a common denominator amongst so many of the successful people
we look up to. Those who create incredible businesses, who are prolific in their art,
who serve others have a commitment to honesty and clarity, and they have a bias
toward action.
***
Through my own development, Ive read about many value systems and
methodologies when it comes to having a life vision and being a person of action.
From David Allens Getting Things Done methodology, to Stephen Coveys 7 Habits,
to Peter Daniels keys for personal motivation, to Tony Robbins 5 questions and
Marc Benio s V2MOM method, to George Leonards keys to mastery, J.D. Meiers
Agile system, and more.
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Each of these methodologies oer something unique and valuable. But none of them
are the only one. There is no secret system that works for all people in all
circumstances. However, there is a common denominator.
By spending time learning, practicing, and teaching these dierent systems, Ive tried
to connect any dots I felt were missing.
When I learn about these systems and methodologies, I can really geek out over the
details. I love to dive deep into the structure, clarity, bullet-point lists, and workflow
charts of these various productivity systems. There are values and priorities from
multiple systems that have influence my own flavor of productivity. But in my dayt0-day life, I like having a simple concept or idea to keep in the front of mind as I try
to stay steady in the pursuit of doing my best creative work.
That simple concept is this:
Have a commitment to honesty and clarity with a bias toward action.
Youd be hard pressed to find a successful musician, athlete, programmer, designer,
writer, singer, project manager, or business owner who didnt have a goal in mind and
who didnt show up every day to practice and work hard.
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Urgent tasks will always find us. Which is why we have to be proactive about making
time for the important tasks.
***
There are two ways to make sure the work youre doing on a consistent basis is of the
important kind.
1.
Know your Most Important Tasks: If your day is prone to getting the best of you,
its often wise to identify 13 tasks that are the most important to get done today.
That way, when something urgent or distracting shows up, youve got a concrete
map for what you need to get done today that will result in making progress on
meaningful work.
But there's also a level higher than the Most Important Tasks themselves. And
that's knowing the overarching goals (or values) for how you want to be spending
your time and what you want to be doing. Which is why it's important to
2. Define your Most Important Goals: In this context, I am using the term "Goals"
as being a level above Tasks. You could also use the term "values" or "habits" or
"practices".
My daily goals help me define the things I want to spend my time doing as it
relates to my work, family, and personal life. My daily goals aren't so granular that
they define what my actual actions items are, but they are also specific enough
that it's easy to know if I'm accomplishing them.
These are the higher-level values for how you want to be spending your time. If you
know what they are, then they can become the plumb lines that help you gauge if
youre spending your time well or not.
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***
Let me share with you what my Most Important Goals are.
MY DAILY WORK GOALS
1.
Push the needle forward on at least one of my current projects. In short, a bias
toward action. This mostly looks like spending time writing every day. It also
includes answering important emails. This usually does not include fiddling
with my to-do list, scrolling through Twitter, or watching cat videos on YouTube.
2. Encourage and serve my team. Making sure the people I work with have the
clarity, resources, and autonomy they need to do their best work; encouraging
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them when they do well, and correcting and honoring them when its clear they
could do better.
3. Spend time away from my desk. Reading, exercising, meeting and talking with
friends or peers in the industry, running errands, etc.
MY DAILY PERSONAL GOALS
1.
Give my boys my full attention. My wife and I have two boys under 3. And since I
work from home, we usually have all three meals together as a family. Also, every
evening I make a point to play trains with them, play catch, or build a fort in the
living room.
2. Encourage and serve my wife. My wife, Anna, is incredible. Being a mom is the
hardest job in the world, and she does it with grace every single day. I do my best
to remind her every day how much I love her and how wonderful she is as well as
to help her with the boys and other household responsibilities.
***
DONT QUIT
My 8 goals are important. They should not be delegated to weekly or just whenever
tasks. If several days go by and I havent spent time in one of these daily goals, then I
know Im on the wrong path and need to get back on track.
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Every single day I want to show up and do meaningful work. Every day I want to tell
my kids and wife how much I love them. Every day I want to encourage my peers
and teammates at how awesome they are. Every day I need personal time of quiet to
think.
Though my goals are in dierent areas of my life (work, personal, family) they
influence each other and overlap. When I allow myself time to think and rest, I make
more significant progress on my work. When I make progress, I feel better about
ending my work day to go be with my family. When I've spent quality time with my
wife and kids, I am emotionally healthier which aids in the creative work I do.
If youre not making progress on meaningful work because youre too tired at the end
of the day, thats okay. But dont give in. Dont assume youll be too tired at the end of
the day, every day, for the rest of your life. What is a goal you can set that will give
you one thing you can do today to make things just a little bit better for you
tomorrow?
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IMPORTANT
NOT IMPORTANT
URGENT
NOT URGENT
Kitchen Fire
Crying baby
Project Deadlines
Some Messages
1
Learning
Progress
Rest
Planning
2
Most Messages
Distractions
Interruptions
Social Media
Busy Work
Time Wasters
Quadrant 1: the urgent and important items. These will always find us. By nature,
they are urgent because they are calling upon us for action. These most certainly
need our attention. Not only is it important that we tend to them, but they are time
sensitive.
Quadrant 3: those things which are urgent but are not important. This quadrant
can (and will) consume most of our time if we are not careful. When the things in
this quadrant call upon us, its what I call the tyranny of the urgent. Its important to
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To quote Henri Nouwen again: If I were to let my life be taken over by what is urgent, I
might very well never get around to what is essential.
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CELEBRATE PROGRESS
How would you define a successful creative career?
Lets define success as having the ability to do creative work were proud of and to
keep doing that work.
However, there is more to it than creative freedom and financial stability. Something
else is also critical to our long-term journey of doing our best creative work.
We need a healthy inner work life.
Our emotional and motivated state is just as important (if not more important) as
our finances, tools, work environment, and overall creative freedom.
Teresa Amabile is a professor at Harvard Business School. In 2012 she gave an
excellent talk at the 99U conference. In that talk she shares about how our inner
work life is what lays the foundation for being our most productive and our most
creative.
When our emotional and motivated state our inner work life is strong and
positive then we are most likely to be at our best in terms of creativity and
productivity.
What drives our inner work life? Well, a lot of things. But one of the most important
is making progress on meaningful work.
When we see we are making progress even small victories then our emotional
and motivated state is strengthened. We are happier and more motivated at work and
are therefore more likely to be productive and creative.
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Consider the converse. When we feel like cogs in a machine then we see our time as
being spent just doing meaningless busy work and not contributing to anything
worthwhile. And so we slowly lose our desire to be productive and ecient. We dont
care about coming up with creative solutions or fresh ideas. We just do whats
required of us in order to get our paycheck so we can go home to our television.
This is one reason why having an annual review for yourself (and your team /
company) can be so beneficial. It reminds everyone of the goals accomplished and
the projects completed. It shows that the oftentimes mundane and dicult work we
do every day is actually adding up to something of value.
Coming back to Teresa Amabile, she calls this the Progress Principle. In short,
making progress on meaningful work is critical to being happy, motivated,
productive, and creative in our work.
And so, if progress is so important, why do we seem to celebrate only the big
victories and only once or twice per year?
One of the greatest ways to recognize our progress is to celebrate all victories big
and small. And one of the best ways to celebrate and chronicle the small victories is
with our own daily journal.
We often forget about our small wins after a few days or weeks. Or they quickly get
buried under our never ending to-do lists. Or, if we dont recognize and celebrate
them, then they stop being small wins and start just being what we should be
doing anyway.
By cataloging and celebrating our small wins each day then we can be reminded that
we are making meaningful progress. And, in truth, its the small wins which all add up
to actually complete the big projects and big goals. As Benjamin Franklin said, its
little strokes that fell great oaks. And so, to celebrate a big victory is actually to
celebrate the summation of a thousand small victories.
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SET AN APPOINTMENT
Do you know when youre next going to work on your project? You dont find time,
you make it. Set a daily or weekly appointment with yourself. Tell your spouse about
it. Now, that is the time slot when youll work on that project. Honor that
appointment just as much as you would if it were with someone else.
Do you already have a time set aside for when you show up to do the work but often
find that you lack inspiration when that time comes? When you sit down to work, do
you first have to think of what the next action step is? This can be discouraging.
Consider having a separate time for planning from the time when you are doing the
work on a project. Come up with the ideas and action steps elsewhere and then when
you sit down to do the work, youve already identified what you need to do.
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If youre waiting until its time to begin work before you make a choice about what to
working on, the choice is much harder. Instead, make the choice for yourself ahead
of time.
To review from the earlier section on The Tyranny of Choice, try this:
1.
Today, at the end of your day, write down the one thing you need to get done
tomorrow. Not necessarily an urgent task with a deadline, but rather an
important ones. A task you need to accomplish in order to keep making progress
on a project.
2. Now, decide when youre going to do that task. Preferably, it will be the first
thing you work on tomorrow.
This is your current self making the choice for your future self. Right now, when you
can think clearly and make an unbiased decision about tomorrow, is the perfect time
to make a decision about the first thing youre going to do.
ACCOUNTABILITY
Having accountability goes a long way in helping us keep our commitments. There
are several forms of accountability:
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Get an accountability partnership. Talk to a friend or two and share them what
youre working on and the challenges youre facing. Meet with them once a
week so they can ask you about the progress youre making.
Make a public commitment on your social network and/or blog. Tell everyone
what youre working on, what the timeframe is for the project, and post
updates about the progress.
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TAKE A BREAK
If youre in your work day and just feeling a bit overwhelmed or distracted, try taking
a break. On more than one occasion Ive found myself not getting any meaningful
work done because Im not committing to the task at hand (Im multitasking a
couple of tasks all at once). Or Im just full-on distracted.
Sometimes Ill find myself in a random cycle of checking my various inboxes. I
realize Im going back and forth between Twitter, email, RSS, Instagram, back to
Twitter, then to email, etc. Im not doing anything productive whatsoever Im just
zoning out looking and waiting for something new to come along. Its a complete
waste of time.
Whats worse is that it can be hard to snap out of it and get back to doing something
productive. So when I realize that Im going back and forth between inboxes not
actually doing anything Ive learned a little trick on how to snap out of it.
I get up from my desk and go walk around for a few minutes. I get a drink of
water, move my legs, breath.
When I come back to my desk I pick one task that I know I can do quickly. It
doesnt even have to be something super-productive or even work-related. One
great thing to try is taking 60 seconds to journal (I use the Day One app for
this) and simply log the progress youve made on any projects so far today.
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Once Ive gotten that first small task done, I pick another. Then another. And
now the momentum is building and Im back on focus.
DELEGATE OR DELETE
If there is a task or project youve been continually putting o, try to delegate if you
can. Or, if its something you dont have to do, consider just dropping it altogether. If
its important, it will re-surface. And its better to be honest with yourself (and
others) that youre not going to get to the project than it is to keep putting it o.
Or, in the terms of Stephen Covey, sharpen the saw. Doing our best creative work on
a consistent basis requires mental health.
An athlete who is training to run a marathon does far more than just show up at the
race track. She eats well, gets a good night sleep, and equips herself with the proper
running attire.
Not only does our physical health keep our mind sharp, but there are also things we
can do to exercise our mind. Such as resting, learning, reading, journaling, writing
down ideas every day, spending time with friends and family, repairing wounded
relationships.
That way, when its next time to do the work, there are no distractions or road blocks
standing in your way. You have a tidy workspace and you know what you need to
work on.
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Eliminate the most common distraction sinks from your life. Say to yourself: I dont
play video games. Or, I dont go to the movies. Or, Im not on Facebook. Or, I
dont check Twitter or email before lunch. Now stick with it, even if its just for a
season of life.
Trying to write a book? Go dark on Twitter for 3 weeks and use that space to make
time to write 1,000 words every day. Then, after the 3 weeks youll have your 21,000word rough draft, not to mention a whole lot more to say on Twitter when you come
back.
Seize that initial wave of motivation and momentum. Dont spend too much time
fiddling with or managing your plan once youve got something rough in the works.
Ideas deteriorate over time; act on them and begin iterating as fast as you can. Set
milestones which can be accomplished in a weeks time or less, and work toward that
goal riding the adrenaline for 5 7 days. Then, set the next milestone and repeat.
DO IT NOW
If its a small or quick task that you can complete in a few minutes or less, just do it
now.
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You realize that you are making progress on meaningful work. This increases your
morale and momentum, and contributes to having a healthy inner work life. Which,
in turn, gives you a boost in your ability to be more productive and creative.
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