sellaz32
JamieS
Really enjoying this discussion! This is something I've thought about quite a bit, especially given my work as a therapist. I heard recently the definition of anxiety is a "disturbed relationship with certainty." In my mind, GTD is about being prepared enough to be present or "appropriately engaged in moment." Planning, on the other hand has an expectation or maybe even a "desire for certainty" which can often lead to more thinking, more stress, and more tension.
Uncertainty is not a problem, it is trying to be certain that creates problems, especially given a world with unknown variables.
I like this quote from Oliver Burkeman in Meditations for Mortals: Four Weeks to Embrace Your Limitations and Make Time for What Counts: "What is worry, at its core, but the activity of a mind attempting to picture every single bridge that might possibly have to be crossed in the future, then trying to figure out how to cross it? The compulsive and repetitious character of worry arises from the fact that for finite humans, this goal is doubly impossible. Firstly, we can’t possibly think of every challenge we might end up facing. Secondly, even if we could, the solace we crave could only come from knowing we’d made it safely over the bridges in question – which we can’t ever know until we’ve actually crossed them."
It certainly doesn't hurt to identify some future next steps in planning a project, but be aware the further out you plan, the chances of extra work increase later. My sister n law is a notorious "pre-crastinator" and gets stuff done so far ahead that she often has to redo.
My point isn't that GTD is anti-planning—it’s anti-illusion of certainty. The "planning" exists to define the very next action, not to conquer the unknown future.
Given the infinite complexities of being a human being plus the various professions and contexts in which we want to get things done in the world, GTD provides the flexibility to meet you at whatever level to point you in the direction of clarity or a "mind like water" if you will.
Uncertainty is not a problem, it is trying to be certain that creates problems, especially given a world with unknown variables.
I like this quote from Oliver Burkeman in Meditations for Mortals: Four Weeks to Embrace Your Limitations and Make Time for What Counts: "What is worry, at its core, but the activity of a mind attempting to picture every single bridge that might possibly have to be crossed in the future, then trying to figure out how to cross it? The compulsive and repetitious character of worry arises from the fact that for finite humans, this goal is doubly impossible. Firstly, we can’t possibly think of every challenge we might end up facing. Secondly, even if we could, the solace we crave could only come from knowing we’d made it safely over the bridges in question – which we can’t ever know until we’ve actually crossed them."
It certainly doesn't hurt to identify some future next steps in planning a project, but be aware the further out you plan, the chances of extra work increase later. My sister n law is a notorious "pre-crastinator" and gets stuff done so far ahead that she often has to redo.
My point isn't that GTD is anti-planning—it’s anti-illusion of certainty. The "planning" exists to define the very next action, not to conquer the unknown future.
Given the infinite complexities of being a human being plus the various professions and contexts in which we want to get things done in the world, GTD provides the flexibility to meet you at whatever level to point you in the direction of clarity or a "mind like water" if you will.