The article I'm talking about is at
http://www.gtdtimes.com/2010/01/30/investing-in-your-horizons-of-focus/
Just speaking for myself, I found this article mystifying and depressing.
"But at a certain moment when you go, when you make decision [sic], you have to go until the end."
"I just spoke with Johan, and he said I have no choice, so I guess we’ll go forward."
"Pain is temporary, but quitting lasts forever."
That's supposed to be inspiring? "Join the GTD bandwagon and you'll never be able to change your mind again! Won't that be great? The pain of difficult choices will be gone, because you will have no choice. If you quit something, you can never ever start it again -- that's the GTD way."
I think I see what the author was trying to establish here, but his example just reads like a square peg that he's hammering into a round hole.
Cheers,
Roger
http://www.gtdtimes.com/2010/01/30/investing-in-your-horizons-of-focus/
Just speaking for myself, I found this article mystifying and depressing.
"But at a certain moment when you go, when you make decision [sic], you have to go until the end."
"I just spoke with Johan, and he said I have no choice, so I guess we’ll go forward."
"Pain is temporary, but quitting lasts forever."
That's supposed to be inspiring? "Join the GTD bandwagon and you'll never be able to change your mind again! Won't that be great? The pain of difficult choices will be gone, because you will have no choice. If you quit something, you can never ever start it again -- that's the GTD way."
I think I see what the author was trying to establish here, but his example just reads like a square peg that he's hammering into a round hole.
Cheers,
Roger