Using paper, but not switching to paper

Do you use paper for your system, without having a full paper system?

I never thought I'd use paper for task management.

I'm using paper for task management.

Not for ALL task management. But I recently decided to take another shot at keeping a hand-written journal, and I find my personal (not work) task management system bleeding into that.

First it was just capture--the journal I've chosen has a narrow left column and a wider right column, and I've been journaling in the right column and using the left column as a capture space, in a kinda sorta bullet journal way, when an actionable thought pops up while I'm writing.

But it's becoming less pure capture and more a sort of active task workspace. I entered "Buy another seed starting mat" in the journal and later transferred it to OmniFocus. But when OmniFocus told me to "Make frittatas with that sausage before it goes bad", I entered that in the journal. I worked the task from there and checked it off there, then only later saw it again in OmniFocus and said, "I did that," and checked it off there, too.

And as a week or three went by, I realized that the journal was seeing a lot more task activity than OmniFocus was. Tasks, including tasks that supported defined projects, were being entered there, worked, and checked off there, without ever going near OmniFocus. That left-hand column has become my primary go-to for, "What should I do now?" in my off time.

And I'm going there more often than I went to OmniFocus, and I'm getting more done. I want to support that trend.

I'm not willing to go to a full paper GTD system. I think this is working partly because of the simplicity and the fact that the lists are short, and moving projects and contexts and Someday/Maybe and so on to paper would undermine that. But I'm also not prepared to give up the GTD level of structure.

Right now, I think the best plan is to model this after the two-minute rule, which is, as I see it, the main place that GTD offers guidance for things that never actually enter the GTD lists. They're not two-minute tasks, but...still.

That leaves the issue of trust in the system. Tasks I enter in the journal don't have this problem--I trust that I will work them or transfer them. Tasks that I enter in OmniFocus and move to the journal are more complicated. If I move them to the journal and check them off in OmniFocus, the system doesn't really know if they got done. If I move them to the journal and just leave them in OmniFocus, I'll have longer lists on OmniFocus than I need, and long lists annoy me.

So I've created a 'moved to journal' context for OmniFocus and set it to On Hold to hide those tasks from my daily lists. Once a week I'll go through those tasks and check off the ones that did get done.

We'll see how this goes.

Anybody else similarly using paper for just part of your system?
 
Do you use paper for your system, without having a full paper system?

I never thought I'd use paper for task management.

I'm using paper for task management.

Not for ALL task management. But I recently decided to take another shot at keeping a hand-written journal, and I find my personal (not work) task management system bleeding into that.

First it was just capture--the journal I've chosen has a narrow left column and a wider right column, and I've been journaling in the right column and using the left column as a capture space, in a kinda sorta bullet journal way, when an actionable thought pops up while I'm writing.

But it's becoming less pure capture and more a sort of active task workspace. I entered "Buy another seed starting mat" in the journal and later transferred it to OmniFocus. But when OmniFocus told me to "Make frittatas with that sausage before it goes bad", I entered that in the journal. I worked the task from there and checked it off there, then only later saw it again in OmniFocus and said, "I did that," and checked it off there, too.

And as a week or three went by, I realized that the journal was seeing a lot more task activity than OmniFocus was. Tasks, including tasks that supported defined projects, were being entered there, worked, and checked off there, without ever going near OmniFocus. That left-hand column has become my primary go-to for, "What should I do now?" in my off time.

And I'm going there more often than I went to OmniFocus, and I'm getting more done. I want to support that trend.

I'm not willing to go to a full paper GTD system. I think this is working partly because of the simplicity and the fact that the lists are short, and moving projects and contexts and Someday/Maybe and so on to paper would undermine that. But I'm also not prepared to give up the GTD level of structure.

Right now, I think the best plan is to model this after the two-minute rule, which is, as I see it, the main place that GTD offers guidance for things that never actually enter the GTD lists. They're not two-minute tasks, but...still.

That leaves the issue of trust in the system. Tasks I enter in the journal don't have this problem--I trust that I will work them or transfer them. Tasks that I enter in OmniFocus and move to the journal are more complicated. If I move them to the journal and check them off in OmniFocus, the system doesn't really know if they got done. If I move them to the journal and just leave them in OmniFocus, I'll have longer lists on OmniFocus than I need, and long lists annoy me.

So I've created a 'moved to journal' context for OmniFocus and set it to On Hold to hide those tasks from my daily lists. Once a week I'll go through those tasks and check off the ones that did get done.

We'll see how this goes.

Anybody else similarly using paper for just part of your system?

There seems to be a few different topics here:

  1. Using the journal as a working space / "What to do next?" place
  2. Trusting & keeping the journal and OmniFocus in-sync with each other
  3. Duplication of effort / multi-purpose of tools

In short, using a separate tool like your journal's column for an "On-deck" or "Next" kind of list of tasks is fine, even if some of them might be duplicated between OmniFocus and the journal. Ideally, having a single source of truth is better than two. However, having two sources of truth is better than having three or four and so on. Personally, I see it as a OmniFocus being a sort of perpetual backlog/database of tasks that you have to sync-up with on a frequent basis but maybe don't need to drive with every single day. The journal is a more distilled or focused (i.e. prioritized) list of tasks that you find more approachable and actionable in the present or very immediate future (i.e. week). Makes a lot of sense, especially if you keep up on "syncing" them up during a weekly review.

As long as you make sure that inputs are properly clarified and at least organized in one of the two places and eventually reconciled with each other, you should be fine. There is probably a bit of duplication of information and/or effort between the two tools and keeping them up-to-date with each other and that's probably a good thing in the sense of "repetition reinforces memory and instills focus". A potential pitfall is that your journaling practice might suffer or that you look at the journal as a place of action rather than reflection. Which may or may not be a good thing; that's up to you to decide on that being a worthwhile trade-off, if that happens.

I myself don't do exactly the same thing per se, however I have a set of plans (i.e. daily, weekly, etc.) in my system that purposefully duplicate some information in the sense of the most important tasks (i.e. 3) that I plan to work on/ensure I am putting my energy towards on a consistent basis, no matter what else may come up or grab my attention. In other words, ensuring I am always making consistent forward momentum on the valuable things. I don't use paper all that much anymore, but when I did, I had zero qualms about using it for smaller inputs/tasks and just handling them there versus running them through my digital system (i.e. different in execution but similar in philosophy of the two-minute rule: avoid adding unnecessary overhead to actually doing work).

Keep us posted on how it goes and any learnings you may get from the practice. I think it's a very good idea.

P.S.

It's not dissimilar to what I recall David doing in his own practice of having mind-maps focusing on specific immediate "things" in a certain shape and duplicating some of the information between his primary tool and his mind-maps.
 
Do you use paper for your system, without having a full paper system?

I never thought I'd use paper for task management.

I'm using paper for task management.

Not for ALL task management. But I recently decided to take another shot at keeping a hand-written journal, and I find my personal (not work) task management system bleeding into that.

First it was just capture--the journal I've chosen has a narrow left column and a wider right column, and I've been journaling in the right column and using the left column as a capture space, in a kinda sorta bullet journal way, when an actionable thought pops up while I'm writing.

But it's becoming less pure capture and more a sort of active task workspace. I entered "Buy another seed starting mat" in the journal and later transferred it to OmniFocus. But when OmniFocus told me to "Make frittatas with that sausage before it goes bad", I entered that in the journal. I worked the task from there and checked it off there, then only later saw it again in OmniFocus and said, "I did that," and checked it off there, too.

And as a week or three went by, I realized that the journal was seeing a lot more task activity than OmniFocus was. Tasks, including tasks that supported defined projects, were being entered there, worked, and checked off there, without ever going near OmniFocus. That left-hand column has become my primary go-to for, "What should I do now?" in my off time.

And I'm going there more often than I went to OmniFocus, and I'm getting more done. I want to support that trend.

I'm not willing to go to a full paper GTD system. I think this is working partly because of the simplicity and the fact that the lists are short, and moving projects and contexts and Someday/Maybe and so on to paper would undermine that. But I'm also not prepared to give up the GTD level of structure.

Right now, I think the best plan is to model this after the two-minute rule, which is, as I see it, the main place that GTD offers guidance for things that never actually enter the GTD lists. They're not two-minute tasks, but...still.

That leaves the issue of trust in the system. Tasks I enter in the journal don't have this problem--I trust that I will work them or transfer them. Tasks that I enter in OmniFocus and move to the journal are more complicated. If I move them to the journal and check them off in OmniFocus, the system doesn't really know if they got done. If I move them to the journal and just leave them in OmniFocus, I'll have longer lists on OmniFocus than I need, and long lists annoy me.

So I've created a 'moved to journal' context for OmniFocus and set it to On Hold to hide those tasks from my daily lists. Once a week I'll go through those tasks and check off the ones that did get done.

We'll see how this goes.

Anybody else similarly using paper for just part of your system?
@Gardener

On this end, dependable Paper contributes to the GTD system as much as Digital because of its:
1. Ease of use
2. Paper has very low cost 'mistake remedies' compared to digital, while digital receives mistake kudos for its copy-&-paste capabilities?

GTD Practice: Clipboards 'filled' with Plain 8 1/2' x 11' Copier Paper and Pen(s), strategically 'all over' the House, Car, etc.
On this end, 'chunkiness is a non-issue' since while carrying is actually enjoyable the sense(s) of 'dopamine preparedness'

'Reliable' Pens are crucial; delighted with PaperMate's recently introduced inexpensive 'loss-able' pens (straight-retail; $3.29 for a package of 10) making their easier 'detachment loss' all the better

As you see GTD fit. . . .

Ps. Heard a story of man whose Rolex watch lost/stolen and was actually kind of happy since he said the Rolex watch came with excessive 'ownership concern(s) / obligation(s)' that far exceeded the Rolex's value

Pps. Look at me, I have a Rolex watch without remembering "be careful of what you want, because you just might get"
 
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I use a 3x5 notepad for capture, but my system is in apple notes. I saw a video of how David Allen does his and I use it that way. One note per sheet and then into the in basket. My system is so simplified, I could switch to paper almost instantly though. I won't combine paper and digital.
 
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