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You cannot have productivity or time management without priorities

My problem is that I have too much Stuff TM that I want to do. I have tons of hobbies and I love to learn, be it by reading, watching documentaries, whatever. I also like to participate with various communities I am a part of. What I am coming to realize is that the main reason why I am not productive and cannot manage my time well is that I am scattered all over the place. And it's not like at work where I can go to my boss and say that I have time for four project out of these ten so choose six for me to work on. This is my personal life; my so called leisure time. Reading one book means missing one documentary which means not participating in some online game which means not working on one of my four or five hobby coding projects which means not playing one of my 25+ computer games, etc.

I spend my entire day always thinking about what I am not doing. And pulling a GTD and brain dumping will not solve my problems as there is absolutely no way I can get 10% done of the stuff I want to get done. The thought of giving up hobbies because I don't have the time for them is one I can't seem to bear. How does one go about choosing Anime over PC strategy games, yoga over tai chi, electronics over philosophy, or Everquest over World of Warcraft!!! Until I make a painful decision give up whole meaty chunks of my life I drive myself crazier trying to time manage it all and I will never be productive; even if in some cases productive means finishing a science fiction novel or a module of Neverwinter Nights.

stevecooper's picture

I think it's reasonable to...

I think it's reasonable to make 'maintain my standards' a top-level goal; breaking it down, you get lots of routine jobs like cleaning the fridge, which contribute to a larger goal, that of maintaining your health, your home, your equipment, your hygiene. Promote it up there alongside becoming the world's first googlilionaire.

I think GTD, Covey, Tony Robbins, etc don't really deal well with issues of maintenance; they are designed to deal with progressions. Projects are started and moved through to completion, long-term goals are worked on, etc. But life involves a bit of running to stand still, and they don't quite deal with that. It's somehow not build in.

[1] http://www.alistapart.com/articles/pickle/

 
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