Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
Merlin’s weekly podcast with Dan Benjamin. We talk about creativity, independence, and making things you love.
”What’s 43 Folders?”
43Folders.com is Merlin Mann’s website about finding the time and attention to do your best creative work.
Psychotherapy for the Chronic Switcher
Matt Wood | Oct 9 2007
There's an obscure rule in baseball for a situation that rarely occurs, when an ambidextrous pitcher faces a switch-hitter. The pitcher has to declare which arm he's going to throw with before the at-bat and stick with it, else the batter could keep jumping back and forth to either side of the plate in an endless game of one-upmanship that would make Tony La Russa's head explode. The intent of the rule is obviously to keep the game moving, but it also saves the pitcher from himself; it forces him to pick his weapon given the challenge he faces, and just go with his best stuff. I need a rule like this when it comes to picking the tools I use to manage my system for getting things done. I know my last post gave the impression that I'm almost proud of changing my system more often than Barry Bonds changes hat sizes, but deep down I'm rather ashamed. I need something to force me to go with my strengths, and just throw strikes the best I can. Someone suggested that I think about what causes me to monkey around with my system as much as I do, and what, if any, elements stay the same. Then maybe as a means of public psychotherapy, the hive mind can help me identify my best pitch. To start, let's look at the reasons why I switch:
Now with that in mind, here are some of the pieces of my myriad systems that always stay the same:
So there you have it, a list of symptoms and the few tried and true potions and balms that always seem to soothe them. Now I ask you, my internet shrinks, to help me figure out the best way to put my shifty ways behind me. After writing this, I think I see a way out, but I want to hear which patterns and behaviors really stand out to you. 7 Comments
POSTED IN:
Sticking with a systemSubmitted by Erin Wade on October 9, 2007 - 5:36pm.
I think where a lot of people fall down on these things is in switching systems over and over again - we lose focus. Instead of being aimed on being productive we get lost in the idea of the productivity system. Then, when a new system comes along it looks all shiny and attractive and we shift to trying that out as well. Partly we're probably all vulnerable to this because we have a lot to do and keep track of - why else would we be looking for a productivity system to manage it? However, the action of looking for and considering a productivity system has an alluring, but problematic dark side - it provides a way to avoid our actual work while rationalizing to ourselves that we are actually doing something important - you know, developing a system to make ourselves more productive. In the end I suspect that any system that is reasonably designed - from GTD to Hipster PDA's to actual PDA's - can work for a person if we stay focused on the actual objective of increasing productivity. It sounds like you have some things that actually do work for you, but you keep abandoning them (or adding to them) for the sexy Moleskine that's smoking French cigarettes in the corner. Sounds like you may need to give yourself permission to buy the Moleskine notebook just because you like them and leave the productivity work to the things that actually already work for you. You're a writer - surely you can justify carrying around a notebook for ideas without needing a separate excuse. » POSTED IN:
|
|
EXPLORE 43Folders | THE GOOD STUFF |