Gameboy70 said:
If it's repetitive and involves multiple actions, then yes, it gets a checklist. I've been working off the checklists long enough do execute them without looking at the lists in most cases.
Thanks so much for sharing your expertise. Some of the chores I've been doing EVERY evening for years - really habitual, right? LOL, the other night, I sprung awake at 3am, realizing that I had totally spaced them, after an otherwise productive day. I presume that because even initial implimentation of GTD has radicalized several areas of my life, that the evening-amnesia is understandable -- and really provided a good example of why checklists are so crucial.
Gameboy70 said:
Any list is just a way to avoid redundant thinking.
Well, then, do you suppose that maybe the easiest most workable solution in answer to the initial query in this thread is to simply make a list of the NAs they decided to accomplish that day --- so that there is no reason to rely on memory, much less having to go back and examine the long list?
Gameboy70 said:
Once the actions on the list have gelled into a habit, the list itself is simply reference material.
Do you mean by this that you file it away in the reference files?
Gameboy70 said:
If I get ahead of myself I either review my Someday/Maybe list to promote some things to the Project list, or I do another Weekly Review (I often do more than one a week if I feel like I have unfinished business rattling around in my head). Other times I'll do things as they occur to me intuitively. Once you get things done, it tends to spontaneously open the channel for a lot of creative thinking due to fewer distractions.
Thanks, I foresee that at least in the beginning that I'd have to do the "weekly" review far more often than once every seven days -- I think otherwise the system will break down for me.
I also foresee that my Someday/MAYBE-Perhaps folder is going to be bulging with dozens & dozens of possibilities; I'm going to set things up initially like you've described, strictly circumscribing the PROJECTS List to current activities that I either want or need to get accomplished. If anything bogs down, or if the projects go faster than expected, then it will be easy to examine the Someday/MAYBE-Perhaps folder and move things into 'NOW.'
With the 'someday' items, maybe I can review that just once a week initially; but the Current Projects and their accompanying NAs . . . I'm certain that I'll have to review that stuff at least every other day, if not indeed, EVERY single morning. I see no other way to seriously adapt GTD into my life. And I'm hoping that all this extra attention at the outset will pay off dividends during the ensuing months when I presume that GTD protocols MIGHT become habitual. (Cross my fingers, LOL

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