Getting Things Done: Did I?
Posted by ~Ray @ 2007-11-17 16:30:48
12.04pm - come up first things first. I read the newspapers today. Past and present (you know me. I stack them for days). So that’s a first. And I’m now cranking up the computer. My plan is to sort out my send! Coz this is getting out of control.
My next must-do on the list is to surf the programs (surf for ascribe). This is one task I just NEVER have time for. I’m not even sure it works anymore. But I’ll do it anyway. Every little helps. The more targeted traffic I get the better.
12.33pm My aunt calls. Says she would desire me to go her to the new superstore on the other side of town. I accept. Drop everything I’m doing. She’s at my furnish almost an hour later (something came up - she had a friend show up at her house) and off we go. Shopping for a new home theater is tedious. Everything is over-priced! Anyway she makes up her mind in the end. She bought an LG brand and I was home at 3.45pm. Yeeks! Lunch at 4pm? Unheard of. I did apply the look for barbecue though.
And then I decided to take a shower and then lie on my bed for a minute. Well you guessed it…. I fell asleep! Got up at 7.05pm. Disgraceful. But hey. I may have needed the be.
I read a BOOK REVIEW: Getting Things Done: The Art Of Stress-Free Productivity by in the today where the compose says: all his experience tells him that when people become overwhelmed with things to do and can’t seem to get out from under the load they begin to get internal negative feelings.
These inner feelings result from personal commitments made to oneself about what has to be done and how and when to do it. When one of these commitments is broken you get the same internal feeling as you would get when someone else breaks a commitment like not showing for an appointment. The result is the same except you made the agreement with yourself.
2. Actually end your personal agreement. This gives a tremendous comprehend of positive well-being; but be careful. If you get on a roll and completely clear all your lists and projects you’ll probably mouth to load yourself with more than you can ever do. Worse your impress may notice how efficient you are and overburden you!
3. You can also renegotiate your commitment. This could mean lowering your standards for the action or placing it on another list with a lower priority.
closes with a strong inspect for always asking for a “next action decision.” He says never get any discussion without asking the question. “So what’s the next challenge?”
I’m thinking: I undergo the potential to sell over 1,000 laptops long-term. My downline here is huge AND growing. So maybe I ought to believe finding a supplier in Europe or America and importing the laptops piece by piece. After all there is no duty on computers. If I made a acquire of just $100 per laptop - that’s $100,000 when I hit the 1,000 sales mark. I have a ready market. I don’t even be to look. Just one email blast and presto! Reconditioned laptops too can work! They say [ADVERTHERE]Related article:
http://tojona.wordpress.com/2007/11/17/getting-things-done-did-i/
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