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Long Next Action List vs. Daily To Do Lists
bengoshisan | Nov 9 2006
Dear All, Before GTD I relied especially on daily to do lists, prioritized (a la Alan Lakein, A-B-C lists), most of which usually did not get done on that particular day, and I wrote a new list every day. I tried to use NA lists instead (which I keep in a per-context-tabbed Moleskine), but somehow this seems too distracting to me. I've read posts on too long NA lists, and I understand that I might need to move some of the NA items to someday/maybe, and some of them might not qualify as a valid NA item. However, even purging those items the lists seem to be overwhelming -- there naturally are things that I will not be able to do on the given day. Furthermore, there are some urgencies and priorities, some things that MUST be done this particular day, and some things that are more important than others. I remember than in classic GTD things that must be done on a specific day are written in the calendar. I, however, do not want to keep looking at the calendar and the NA list to decide what is my next-next action. Due to all these I tend to prepare a "daily next action list" every day (sometimes one for 2-3 days), and I use that to decide what's next. (I make contexts within that, too.) This also has the advantage that I try not to put items on the list which I will definitely not have time to do in the next 1-2-3 days. However, this way the "master" NA list loses its sense -- some items just never make it to the "daily NA list". Any reflections on this? P.S.: Well, thinking over the whole idea, what is happening is basically that I still have an A-priority list, and a C priority lists, where things on the C-priority list tend not to get done... A psychologist friend of mine told me once that I have a strong tendency to prioritize -- maybe that is happening subconsciously when compiling my "daily next action list". 5 Comments
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I have found it easier...Submitted by bengoshisan on November 13, 2006 - 5:55am.
Mekkaniak;6599 wrote:
I have found it easier to get things done by pick about 5 items from my @Work list, and put in a DoTodayList. It's not pure GTD, but it helped me focus. But I have to be careful not to put things that pop-up during the workday into my TodayList. So I have two papers on my desk, the other being the Inbox. I think here you have a point, or actually two. First is focus -- that's my exact need, and that's why daily list worked before too. Second is the separation of the daily list from the inbox. If items go straight to the daily list without going through "proper" GTD processing, then the "master" NA list will be left out of the system -- which then turns everything on you master NA list into "stuff", things you worry about because you don't know what's happening to them, because you're only using your daily to do list. On the other hand, if you keep your inbox separate from your daily to do list, and you only put items to the daily list from the master NA list, then at the end of the day you can just throw the daily list away (maybe do a little review, and cross out from your NA list the items that have been completed), because the next day you would be picking the "NAs of the day" from the master NA list again. This way the master NA list remains functional. I read that some GTDists use a NA list which is stored in a word file and printed every day. I tried this for a few days, but I'd rather like to use the moleskine (just because it's so nice) :) But if you print your NA list, then you can just mark the "NA's of the day" on your daily printout, the ones that you want to do that day -- and voila! here's your daily list, and you still use your NA list. And if you run out of "dailies", you can just continue with anything on your NA list in the given context. Well, well, I may need to try this again. » POSTED IN:
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