jireland
GTD Connect
Dear GTD Connect members,
I read the following Weekly Review Reminder a couple of weeks ago just before sitting down to do my Weekly Review:
I am calling this one 2014 Completion Challenge, and my invitation is, as we move closer toward the end of the year, to up your game with your Weekly Review, asking:
1) What is going to give me the greatest relief (and/or win) to complete by the end of the year?
2) What if I could move into a new year relatively residue-free by completing some of those actions that have been lingering on the lists for awhile?
And schedule time to complete those actions! Or have the courage to move them to Someday Maybe. I would love for us to all rally in support of each other ending the year as rock star completionists!
Take good care,
Julie
I read the following Weekly Review Reminder a couple of weeks ago just before sitting down to do my Weekly Review:
As I was moving through my review I became acutely aware that many of my action items had been sitting on my lists for a REALLY long time. I mustered the courage to look at just how out of my integrity I was by letting these incompletions sap my energy. So many of them seemed more like have tos, and not someday maybes, and yet I just haven't made them a priority. I felt really yucky about the prospect of moving into a new year with this residue of incompletions. I figured that if I am experiencing this, there just may be a few other folks in our community that are as well, so I decided to update the Dusty Actions Core Challenge that I have done in the past:Dear Julie, What most has your attention now? If it's specific and known, then the Weekly Review is great for ensuring a clear space from which to tackle it. If your attention is on a vague sense of overwhelm and unclear open items, the Weekly Review is the Grand Elixir.
A task left undone remains undone in two places - at the actual location of the task, and inside your head. Incomplete tasks in your head consume the energy of your attention as they gnaw at your conscience. They siphon off a little more of your personal power every time you delay. No need to be a perfectionist, that's as debilitating in an imperfect world, but it's good to be a completionist. If you start it, finish it - or forget it.--Brahma Kumaris
I am calling this one 2014 Completion Challenge, and my invitation is, as we move closer toward the end of the year, to up your game with your Weekly Review, asking:
1) What is going to give me the greatest relief (and/or win) to complete by the end of the year?
2) What if I could move into a new year relatively residue-free by completing some of those actions that have been lingering on the lists for awhile?
And schedule time to complete those actions! Or have the courage to move them to Someday Maybe. I would love for us to all rally in support of each other ending the year as rock star completionists!
Take good care,
Julie