- Wake up
- Get dressed
- Have breakfast
- Put on church clothes
- Go to church
- Have lunch
- Take off church clothes
- Have quiet time
- Play with AJ
- Eat dinner
- Clean up
- Watch a show
- Brush teeth
- Get into PJs
- Read books
- Go to bed
As JD did these things throughout the day, he'd cross them off his list (just like Toad). I make plenty of lists too. I actually haven't found a personal organizational scheme that I really like yet. I had a day-planner for a while but I couldn't stand transferring entries from one day to the next by hand. I've read some of David Allen's work (Getting Things Done) but managing whole-life to-do lists becoming unwieldy without proper software support. The current system I'm using is GooToDo. It's a pretty cool little Web-based tool that I would highly recommend to others. It's not perfect by any means but it's convenient for scheduling to-do's in the future (but not seeing them now) and prioritizing taks for a particular day. Also, you can email tasks to yourself and have them show up on a particular day. The main thing that it's not good at is managing what David Allen refers to as "someday/maybe" items (items that don't have a specific target completion date but things that you want to remind yourself of and not lose track of). Also, the tool is only useful if you're online. I haven't figured out a great way to use it offline.
The time management quest continues. There's a big part of me that wishes, however, that my list of "things to do today"was as simple as JD's.
4 comments:
43 Folders seems to be a good resource for GTD issues, tips, tricks, and software.
Here is a recording of a conference call done on August 6 regarding GooToDo with its creator Mark Hurst.
Here is a testimonial I wrote for Gootodo.
Here is an article regarding Getting Things Done: http://www.geocities.com/gnp_30/Getting_Things_Done.pdf
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