Blog-a-thon interrupted
Sunday, July 20th, 2008So I’ve missed a few days of blogging. A recap of my last few days:
- Saw the Dark Knight Premiere, 12 a.m. show. Was definitely worth the wait. Heath Ledger’s Joker is brilliant. The movie is much heavier and darker than Batman Begins, so I’m planning to watch it a second time with Laura sometime later this week. Anyone interested in joining us?
- Laura and I finally replaced our “office chairs” with real, ergonomic and comfortable office chairs. Got a great deal at Bureau en Gros (Staples for the rest of the world) and found out that they negotiate on office furniture. Cool.
- Saw my physio therapist for my back. Turns out, my back is fine. This diagnosis was that my lower body is just over-rotated, and thus my back muscles are pushing on my sciatic nerve. Doing the exercises she recommended allowed me to hit 50 balls without pain yesterday, so that’s encouraging. Still, this experience helped me realize that if I ever want to perform at the elite level of golf that I aspire to achieve, I need to re-dedicate myself to fitness.
Finally, I’m back on the GTD horse. My office has been a mess for some time and again, I found myself having to remember my to-do items in my head, neglecting my Omnifocus. After re-reading the beginning of the book, I found out that I was under-utilizing my calendar and over-scheduling my to-do items. For example, I gave the task “Watch Ricardo Semler’s presentation Leading by Omission” some arbitrary due date. I thought it was a good idea at the time, but given that I have roughly 120 tasks that I’d like to do but don’t have to get done, I was constantly going into my daily Omnifocus and rescheduling about 65% of the tasks. That conditioned me to to go numb to Omnifocus since I learned most of the daily tasks were tasks I didn’t have to do or couldn’t do, effectively killing my productivity system. I’m in the middle of re-organizng my tasks and hopefully this 4th GTD iteration will be the most effective yet. I think the biggest cause for being on my 4th iteration of this effort is that I didn’t take the time to read the book in in its entirety, a mistake I won’t make this time. Although the first chapters talk about the concepts, I’m finding the instruction provided in the later chapters of equal importance, if not greater. If anyone is serious about being more productive and effective with their time, this book is a must.
nK





