Depends what you mean by "get it"
TesTeq said:
Anonymous said:
It's funny. One of the ways that The David Allen Company could gauge whether the forum members "get it" or not, is by checking the activity of this board.
If everyone takes the revelations in this thread to heart, there'll be less and less activity here as time goes by...
OK. So it seems that Jason Womack, Mochant and other top posters still did not "get it" :?
TesTeq
Like a lot of long-time GTD'ers, I find that I have a biorhythm of sorts when it comes to fiddling with my system. When I'm really engaged in my projects, I tend to "get simple" and focus on the actual "Getting" part of GTD. When I have a bit of time on my hands, I tend to fiddle.
I'm an inveterate, unabashed, and unrepentant gadget freak. I love playing with new technologies and productivity tools. I read voraciously. I blog furiously. And I spend time (when available) in communities like this one to exchange ideas, advice, and techniques.
If any of you have studied martial arts (of any sort), you know that practice, practice, practice is the path to mastery. Knowing the "how" of a thing is important in an intellectual sense but feeling the "how" in a physical sense is where the theory becomes reality.
So, in GTD terms, understanding the myriad ways the system
can be implemented is important, but does not conote mastery. Effortlessly
doing GTD in a flowing, mind-like-water fashion where collection, organization, disposition, and tracking is second nature is the sign of a black belt.
In Aikido, mind like water translates to an effortless, unhurried, flowing series of movements that use the energy being supplied by your opponent. This energy is redirected to your desired outcome. You expend little or no energy of your own.
In GTD, when a project's NA indicates that it is the next most important thing I can be doing in the context I am in provides the "energy", I direct that "energy" towards getting that thing done. When it's all working, it's blissful.
But, just like Tiger Woods, who was "in the zone" for a while and seemed unbeatable now struggles or a baseball player on a htting streak suddenly finds himself in a slump, even black belts have down cycles. Adjusting a stance or a swing or a GTD technique can often refresh one's approach and re-energize one's enthusisam.
Ultimately, that's the biggest benefit communities like this provide for me. An injection of enthusiasm and an eye-opening approach I might not have considered.
So "getting it" might mean different things to different people.
(Sorry for the ramble - I'm feeling a bit philosophical this morning :wink: )