S
Seraphim
Guest
New and feeling dense
I tried GTD a few months ago. It helped a lot, but my thinking and use of it was rather "fuzzy", not so clear, and the method degenerated till clutter caught up again. I'm trying now the second time around, and am starting to "get it" a lot better, getting the hang of it.
What's helping most is: getting used to the kinds of "bins", which are filing systems and which are only lists.
Also, using "checklists" anywhere (actionable or not), as needed, and feeling free about them.
Re-reading GTD in pieces, learning the principles, the how and why for the "processing" and the "bins".
I've been implementing GTD piecemeal, as workload allows time for it; as I learn the principles and terms of GTD, the how and why of it, things start soaring more and more, plenty of relief, joy, and clarity.
I tried GTD a few months ago. It helped a lot, but my thinking and use of it was rather "fuzzy", not so clear, and the method degenerated till clutter caught up again. I'm trying now the second time around, and am starting to "get it" a lot better, getting the hang of it.
What's helping most is: getting used to the kinds of "bins", which are filing systems and which are only lists.
Also, using "checklists" anywhere (actionable or not), as needed, and feeling free about them.
Re-reading GTD in pieces, learning the principles, the how and why for the "processing" and the "bins".
I've been implementing GTD piecemeal, as workload allows time for it; as I learn the principles and terms of GTD, the how and why of it, things start soaring more and more, plenty of relief, joy, and clarity.