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Tomorrow Save the World
by Charles Burke
Denny was always choking himself
at our school lunch table.
You've heard of biting off more
than you can chew? Not Denny. I never saw him
chew. He'd bite off more than he could swallow.
At least twice a day he'd shovel in too much and
we'd see him stop, his eyes watering, while he
strained to get it all down.
In the four years I knew him, Denny
never learned to take smaller bites.
The ironic thing? We used to laugh
at Denny, and yet, for years I did exactly the
same thing with my daily schedules.
A typical To-Do list might look
like:
TODAY
I WILL -
1.
Write my new book
2.
Submit it to 10 publishers
3.
Promote the book on radio stations
4.
Outline my next book
I'm exaggerating here, but not by
much.
At the end of the day, I'd look
at my list, with nothing checked off, and get
discouraged. It takes forever to check anything
off a list like that.
My problem? I was greedy and didn't
want to settle for little steps.
Like Denny, what I really needed
to do was cut things up into smaller, bite-size
chunks and then tackle them one at a time.
To-Do lists serve two purposes.
First, of course, they help you organize your
activities and get things done in a logical sequence.
But the second purpose is to supply positive feedback.
We need to know that we're making forward progress,
and how much.
Part of motivating yourself is supplying
that positive feedback to yourself. And if you
use lists with over-size chunks, it can take days
or weeks to get one item done.
That makes it hard to keep the feeling
of momentum, so it's naturally hard to stay motivated.
My main problem was, I can be impatient
to get started. I like doing things more than
I like planning them.
So I'd often be tempted to cut short
my morning planning time. I'd throw all sorts
of things into my list, assuring myself, that,
well, I know I won't get all the way down the
list today, so I can carry some items over till
tomorrow.
That's when I would write in these
huge jobs. I did that because I was in a hurry
and didn't take the time to think it through and
break them down into the individual steps.
I wasn't cutting the chunks into
small, manageable bites.
I guess everybody has heard the
old riddle: How do you eat an elephant? Answer:
One bite at a time. It may be a joke, but there's
a lot of wisdom underneath the laughter.
The job of a To-Do list is to feed
you bites, not elephants.
If your To-Do list usually has you
scheduled to move boulders and mountains instead
of pebbles and rocks, you probably need to cut
up those tasks into smaller pieces. Some people
refer to this as "chunking down."
So if there are days when you have
trouble finishing your To-Do list, take a closer
look at the items you've written there. How big
are they?
Can you really write that eBook
today? Or design and write an entire website?
Try taking more time to think your
tasks through. By cutting that elephant into bites,
it's a lot easier to get the job done. And it
forces us to do something that may be very unfamiliar
- thinking.
When you find yourself impatient
to just go ahead and get started and to heck with
the details, you're setting yourself up for extreme
frustration.
That's the way you cheat your project
(and yourself) of the analytical thought needed
for logical continuity.
And don't try to kid yourself that
you're a "natural manager" who can handle
details intuitively, on the fly. That's just rationalization.
Even natural managers choke, like
my friend Denny, when they try to swallow elephants.
Cheers from sunny Japan,
Charles
~~ CharlesBurke.com ~~
NOTE:
You're
welcome to run this article in your ezine, or
to post it on your website. Just be sure to
include the following information with the article.
Charles
Burke is the author of Command
More Luck, the book
that shows you why all those things
keep happening to you. Learn why "luck"
doesn't work anything like the way
you've always been told.
The bad news - there's no such thing
as luck. The good news - there's something
even better. Go to http://www.moreluck.com
and learn how you can take command
of what people call luck. Start today.
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