Define done for cooking

gandalf100

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I want to cook more. First - I can't define what it is. It's not a project because it's something that there is no finish line that I can see.
What do you think?
 
I want to cook more. First - I can't define what it is. It's not a project because it's something that there is no finish line that I can see.
What do you think?
@gadalf100

For habitual cooking sustainability . . . begin with what does clean-up look like . . . continuous cleaning while cooking

Use fridge door for 'Most Immediate Use'

Constant celebrating for habitual/intrinsic reinforcement(s)

Your gonna do great !

As you see GTD fit. . . .

Ps. On this end, 'always' prefer Steaming and Simmering in water using Low-Heat whenever possible to facilitate easy clean-up
 
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I want to cook more. First - I can't define what it is. It's not a project because it's something that there is no finish line that I can see.
What do you think?
What is preventing you from cooking more? Are you an experienced cook who now cooks less? Do you want or need to become a better cook? Do you have recipes you want to cook? Are there health or financial issues involved? Do you need to do meal planning and buy food? Do you know all the actions you need to take to cook more? How much more? At this point, maybe it all sounds like a project. Maybe it’s turns out to be a weekly recurring project, maybe eventually cooking will be completely on cruise control, but right now it’s really a project.
 
I want to cook more. First - I can't define what it is. It's not a project because it's something that there is no finish line that I can see.
What do you think?
@gandalf100

Is it a routine? Maybe, but it sounds to me more like a spontaneous and enjoyable hobby.

Could it be a Someday-Maybe that you get out now and then and play around with? I kind of like making it a Someday-Maybe because it is not a commitment until you decide to do it. It can be a fun thing to do when the mood strikes. Then it can return to your Someday-Maybe list until you're ready for it again.

Could it be a Horizon 2 Area of Focus or a sub-set? For instance:
Enjoyment of Life ---> Fun Hobbies ---> Cook More

As I recall, the idea of the Areas of Focus per Coach Meg Edwards, is that this Horizon of Focus is a bridge level that connects or gudes the Higher Horizons (Purpose and Principles, Vision, and Goals) into current Projects and current Actions.

I understand that a Project needs several things:
1. It includes more than one action
2. Its actions will generally be completed within about a year
3. It has been given a "desired outcome," so it is clear whether or not all its actions have been completed.
A "desired outcome" is an answer to the question: What does "done" feel and look like in the present tense?

I think it could become a Project:
"I am now adept at boiling water, and I'm thrilled with my achievement."
"I now poach delicious salmon with panache, and I love doing this."

This end-state orientation, while great for focus and clarity and making progress, might (or might not) eclipse the sponteneous joy of (doing whatever) on a delightful whim.

I think "cook more" could be a sub-categoy in Areas of Focus, and also a Someday Maybe, and whenever the urge strrikes, a Project.

Or maybe it does not need to be on a list. I recall that Meg Edwards once had an inspiration (if I recall this correctly) to bake blueberry muffins. It was a spontanous urge she had that was not on any of her lists, and she did not need to locate it within her system.

Go figure. We create a time-worn and hard-wrought system only to bravely, inventively, and creatively unicycle without it.

Thanks for your post, @gandalf100!

Emily
 
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What is preventing you from cooking more? Are you an experienced cook who now cooks less? Do you want or need to become a better cook? Do you have recipes you want to cook? Are there health or financial issues involved? Do you need to do meal planning and buy food? Do you know all the actions you need to take to cook more? How much more? At this point, maybe it all sounds like a project. Maybe it’s turns out to be a weekly recurring project, maybe eventually cooking will be completely on cruise control, but right now it’s really a project.

What great questions, @mcogilvie!

I see that the answers to specific questions can help us clarify what we want to get done. I think that's what the OP was saying about not seeing a finish line, and therefore not thinking this is a Project. What you seem to me to be doing is getting more granular about what is involved in "cook more" in order to gain more clarity about what the OP might want to achieve, or what the OP's finish line could be. Or did I miss something here?

Do we in GTD translate whatever arises into what we want to achieve? You know, I think it does. I had not grasped this. GTD is an active orientation. We move things from our thoughts and notes and external input and Higher Horizons into do-able small steps. No matter what arises when we are capturing what has our attention, even an emotion that revisits us, any problem can be identified as actionable and can become a Project. If we set something aside in Someday-Maybe as non-actionable for now when we cannot commit to it yet, it is still part of our system. We will be then able to take action when and if the time is right.

Yes, but surely some things are deeper, more meaningful, more aligned with the life force: the blush on the face of a beloved, the delight of swimming across a cool freshwater lake, the ineffable majesty of Half-Dome, the power and grace of striding out when dancing to music, the quiet pleasure and comfort we feel with a beloved pet, the simple immediacy of the full experience of being human and alive.

Does a GTD system crafted with simplicity and focused on actions and outcomes encompass these magnificent subtleties? David Allen might say that our ability to be present in the moment and participate in life wholeheartedly is the whole point. I'm with him.

Warmly,

Emily
 
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