DKPhoto,Ahh, so you’re giving me room to think, but all i can come up with is tumbleweed-pretty much sums me up!
Gardener,For what it's worth, the colors and ellipses make it much, much harder for me to read your posts.
It makes sense, but it does not appeal to me at all. I tried similar quantitative tracking years ago, and found it unhelpful and perhaps even detrimental. I find that the more subtle cues I get from regular review of my horizons of focus to be sufficient. But to each his own.I track frequency, mainly. For exercise, I track the frequency, but I log my workouts separately, which is something I have done for years. For dates, I track frequency and content. For my savings rate, I track the dollar amount and percentage. Does that make sense?
I understand. I’ve tried many ways to track items, and my current iteration seems to be the best fit for me and has been helpful. It doesn’t feel like extra work or detrimental.It makes sense, but it does not appeal to me at all. I tried similar quantitative tracking years ago, and found it unhelpful and perhaps even detrimental. I find that the more subtle cues I get from regular review of my horizons of focus to be sufficient. But to each his own.
And that's where you totally lose me. I am most definitely NOT visual. I can't stand dark mode, where the colors are glaring and harsh and the dark background is painful to look at. The combination impairs my understanding of the meaning. Even here in the nice clean grays I can see and understand but your colors stop and are harsh and I get stuck and can't even read the meaning what you are saying/typing.Also a 'visualist' on this end and agree the the advantage of habitual knowing what the All/Life-Encompassing previously expressed colors represent: Areas-of-Focus colors represent in General: Divine, Persons, Engineering (Obstacles), Tools/Utilities, and Fiscal and in Particular: A's (Acceptance, Accuracy, Awareness, etc.), Healthy, Toxic, Props, Provisions
To me ellipsis's do not slow down cognition, they stop it completely, make me try to figure out what the heck you consider important and give my brain no place to rest like a period does.In addition to often omitting end points (periods), the use of ellipsis's . . . is to facilitate/slow-down cognitive processing, etc., while the omission of periods is to express a definitive conclusion(s) remains open. . . .
Oogiem,And that's where you totally lose me. I am most definitely NOT visual. I can't stand dark mode, where the colors are glaring and harsh and the dark background is painful to look at. The combination impairs my understanding of the meaning. Even here in the nice clean grays I can see and understand but your colors stop and are harsh and I get stuck and can't even read the meaning what you are saying/typing.
To me ellipsis's do not slow down cognition, they stop it completely, make me try to figure out what the heck you consider important and give my brain no place to rest like a period does.
I've just spent almost 30 minutes trying to figure out how to explain the problem I have with your posts, because I want to hear what you say but your delivery overshadows any useful information for me.
Sure - thanks!I track frequency, mainly. For exercise, I track the frequency, but I log my workouts separately, which is something I have done for years. For dates, I track frequency and content. For my savings rate, I track the dollar amount and percentage. Does that make sense?
This resonates with me. I can go quite a bit of time with things in one particular inbox or another. The one thing that is really a part of the weekly review is something I picked up from the Meg Edwards guided weekly review: during the weekly review when your INs aren't at zero, schedule time in the upcoming calendar to clear them out. That's actually part of the weekly review: to manage INs (not necessarily clarify them all).To me, it's way more crucial to do a weekly review once a week than having some items laying in an inbox for more than 48 hours...
I like colors. I like patterns. I like stripes and herringbone and polka dots and paisley. But I don't like words and sentences and paragraphs in colors, stripes, herringbone, polka dots, or paisley. The primary function of letters and words and paragraphs is communication, and adding decoration to them reduces the communication.Clearly some like colors and some prefer gray as their premier color [its been said that black contains all colors]; life in a concrete city or being free as a bee in the open colorful country; why would anyone choose the former?
Gardener,I like colors. I like patterns. I like stripes and herringbone and polka dots and paisley. But I don't like words and sentences and paragraphs in colors, stripes, herringbone, polka dots, or paisley. The primary function of letters and words and paragraphs is communication, and adding decoration to them reduces the communication.
I'm uninterested in blocks of text--more than a dozen words or so--that are decorated to the extent that they're hard to read.Are you making it clear that you are uninterested in colored comics [happy], comic books, serious book covers, invitations, greeting cards, internet, etc.?
No Some prefer clarity in written communication. Colors interspersed hide the details and make it harder to read.Clearly some like colors and some prefer gray as their premier color [
Gardener,I'm uninterested in blocks of text--more than a dozen words or so--that are decorated to the extent that they're hard to read.
(Internet? Most blocks of text on the internet are the same color, font, and size.)
Oogiem,No Some prefer clarity in written communication. Colors interspersed hide the details and make it harder to read.
BTW I live on a farm and as a farmer I deal with nature in all the raw and sometimes heartbreaking reality daily. I have colors of nature in my face every single hour of my waking time. My computer is an oasis of calm and I like it sedate and controlled and easy on the eyes.
It's also a function of age. I started with CRTs and the neon colors of orange and green and white and it's physically painful to have too much color when trying to read text.
dermzont,I believe that it may be because I am a photographer, so a visual person. A strong visual will often have contrast and/or patterns. I think my brain sees your use of colour before it sees anything else, so is trying to interpret the colour not the words.
@dermzcont You seem to have copied and pasted something i said earlier in this thread, but without making a comment. What’s your input?I believe that it may be because I am a photographer, so a visual person. A strong visual will often have contrast and/or patterns. I think my brain sees your use of colour before it sees anything else, so is trying to interpret the colour not the words.