This topic is something I'm very interested in too.
One of my top priorities is the self studying of courses and exams to take that are related to my work. I work for myself and so development of my skills is very important to me. Not to mention that I am switching career paths too and won't have the large amount of experience that I have now to take with me down this road. And so I turn to certifications/qualifications to get me started.
I'm new to GTD and am approaching my third weekly review. Everything seems to be going well so far.
I've planned my weekly calender and have approached this realisticly but also strictly. Meaning that I've been realistic about when I can physically take the next action and scheduled these chunks out in my calender. So far anything thats a date/time specific task has been completed. I'm due to start my self study tomorrow evening. I've also had to be strict with myself and specific about the task in hand. For example, Read Chapter 1 of X, take end of chapter test and also "lecture to the wall". I've blocked out two hours for each of these and I'll see how that goes. I may need more and I may need less.
If I wasn't specific about what I had to do and blocked out two hours for something like, "Self development", for me thats too wide and I know exactly what I would do. I would exploit that. I would do a number of things that would come under the category and right now top priority is to pass a particular exam. If I allowed myself to study across 4 or 5 things then the passing of the exam would take me longer. I've given myself 2 months to pass an exam which I do think IS realistic.
Again, if these 'priorities' are truly important to you, you have to approach them with the respect they deserve. This is not a case of being selfish; you can't serve others well if you aren't at your best, and you won't be at your best if you don't take care of some of these things.
This quote above is now making me think that maybe they are not truly important to myself. If they were I'd book the exam date right? If they were I wouldn't find this so hard to do right?
See, even though I'm in only my third week of GTD, I can already feel that I'm more attracted to some tasks than others. I know that. I can feel that when I choose. I know I'm not applying the right "what do I do now?" context rules when I look at my lists.
For me there are a number of reasons for this. For example, passing the exam will bring some very big unknown changes to my life. At the moment I have a very flexible contract allowing me to arrive and depart at will and work from home when I choose. This comes in very handy when your wife works shifts and you have two kids to help look after. If I pass this exam and get experience in the new field then more contracts and clients may follow meaning that I no longer have that flexibility.
The others seem to be that I haven't defined thoroughly what the next steps are. I've been too generic.
@Borisoff - I'd be interested to hear what you find that does work for you.
Anyway I'm off to buy the book recommended by jknecht. Thanks for that.
I'd also be interested to hear how other people do handle your self development projects and what works for you.