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pepperz22
Guest
Hello everyone! I am new to GTD. I just (this morning) finished listening to the audible.com audio version of Getting Things Done and am completely sold. I have completed collecting and processing an inbox at home and plan on starting the process at work next week (I'm a teacher and still have a couple weeks left before school starts again - it will be really nice to implement the system without having day-to-day things to worry about right away).
I'm sure I'll have lots of questions - but right now designating and naming projects is a bit confusing to me. I have a lot of multi-action projects on my list that obviously belong - like, "organize photographs," or "prepare course syllabus." These are both things that I can complete but that require a few actions to do so. But I don't know if the really big amorphous things that you can't really ever finish belong on the project list - like, "improve overall health," or "develop collaborative relationship with other teachers" belong there. Is it OK to put a project on the list that you will never check off as complete? Or should there be a separate section for those big out-there aspirations?
I'm sure I'll have lots of questions - but right now designating and naming projects is a bit confusing to me. I have a lot of multi-action projects on my list that obviously belong - like, "organize photographs," or "prepare course syllabus." These are both things that I can complete but that require a few actions to do so. But I don't know if the really big amorphous things that you can't really ever finish belong on the project list - like, "improve overall health," or "develop collaborative relationship with other teachers" belong there. Is it OK to put a project on the list that you will never check off as complete? Or should there be a separate section for those big out-there aspirations?