How I learned to stop worrying and love my schedule

by Brad Isaac on August 18, 2005

Personally, I had read and implemented much of David Allen’s Getting Things Done principals, but found that the methods either weren’t right for me, or I was “special” and had too many projects to manage using the GTD system.

I listed every task I needed to do, every “open loop” and noted my @nextactions. What I ended up with was a very long list! This list was and is a bit intimidating. Thoughts of “Where should I start?” and “This sure is taking a lot of time.” Were common. My next actions number in the 20′s – my total list around 160. It takes a long time just to read through them all. There seemed to be a missing link that made me abandon the system for my old system – Pick my 5-6 most important tasks of the day and do them.


With that said, Peter Flaschner from To-Done may have provided the GTD missing link I was looking for. Scheduling all those tasks! (That’s a picture of his calendar). You may ask why I didn’t schedule my tasks before. Well, I may have misread, but I thought Mr. Allen’s book said not to schedule tasks that weren’t meetings or something to that effect.

However, reading through the To-Done tip makes me want to give it the Getting Things Done system a try again. I had already gotten back to setting alarm reminders for my 5-6 tasks, but maybe the schedule would work better.

Link: How I learned to stop worrying and love my schedule.

I felt totally out of control. My next-action lists were long and my calendar was full, but I had no real idea where I was going.

Until I started using my calendar. REALLY using it. For some reason, I never made the leap from next-actions to SCHEDULING next-actions. As soon as I did that, calm returned, and productivity went through the roof.

I now schedule EVERYTHING. As a result, very little gets missed. I’m still using next-actions, but I’ve added the step of mapping them out on upcoming weeks. This way, I can relax, knowing that I’m going to get them done.

I don’t really feel everything is out of control, but I do feel I have too much I want to do. So what do you think? Should I give the GTD system another go?

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{ 1 comment }

Welmoed May 6, 2007 at 5:41 pm

This sounds a lot like ResultsWare’s “Taskline”, which I have been using with great success for nearly two years. It takes the tasks in my Outlook and turns them into appointments, sorted by several different criteria (priority, project, due date, etc). I’m going to take a look at To Done and see if it offers anything different.

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