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Don’t Write It Down?

Don’t Write It Down?

Write it down. Get it out of your head. Your mind is for having ideas, not holding them.

Productivity advice often centers around getting things out of your head.

Notetaking advice is often similar:
– Always write your thoughts down.
– Writing is thinking.

In many ways, writing and “getting things out of your head” through writing can be powerful. Writing certainly helps me organize my thoughts and store my intentions as tasks.

For example, to wrap up a session well, we can consciously consider:

“Is this off of my mind?”

I can then use the prompt to write thoughts as tasks, questions, and the like until it is off of my mind, such that I have effectively created a useful save point.

Gestational Phases of Thought

However, this advice can run contrary to recognizing the importance of keeping thoughts in mind. In other words, what if we occasionally practiced a gestational phase of thought?

For example, Hemingway would deliberately not complete things in a session of work:

“The best way is always to stop when you are going good and when you know what will happen next. If you do that every day when you are writing a novel you will never be stuck.” —Ernest Hemingway

Leaving ideas to churn in mind, at least for me, is a great way to get to those “aha” moments between sessions.

We can even use the same concept within a session of work itself.

Instead of writing things down as soon as they come to mind, I like to hold multiple ideas. That’s where I sometimes find a cross product of ideas creating another interesting concept.

After giving my idea some time, when it more fully forms, that is when I write it down.

It’s not an exercise I do all the time, but when I do, I often find benefit.

– Kourosh

PS. As a brief exercise, the next time you have a project you are working on, instead of writing,
1. pause
2. consider closing your eyes for a moment
3. Try imagining the parts of the project
4. Trying imagining their order or reorder them

It doesn’t have to be long, and doing so may be tougher than you think. But I wonder if you’d find benefit in the attempt. Either way, feel free to hit reply and let me know how it went

What is Productivity?

Productivity is many things. For some, it is about doing a lot in a little time.
But, truly, productivity is so much more. It is about:

  • Setting yourself up for success.
  • Being focused where you want to be.
  • Doing things that you find meaningful.
  • Being creative, sometimes even in harsh environments.
  • Forging your own paths.
  • Finding your voice and delivering it well.
  • Knowing and actively deciding on your obligations.
  • Knowing where and how to say “no”.
  • Avoiding procrastination.

Too often, many of us fall into just going along with and fighting whatever the world throws at us. “Go with the flow!”, we say. Meanwhile, we might think, “I’d like to do that one thing. Maybe one day I will.” The days go by. The goal never arrives, and then we wonder why or blame circumstance.

But when we learn to take charge of our lives and the world
around us, we start living life with intention.

“I should do that,” becomes “This is how I start”. Deliberately forging a path to our goals and dreams, we figure out what we want in life and then start taking steps there.

Of course, striking out may seem scary. It takes courage to live life with purpose and on purpose. Roadblocks and worries, fears and concerns show up everywhere.

This is my passion. I want to help you to find that sense of your own unique play to meet the world so that you can:

  • Create a life that is yours.
  • Find and follow an inner guide in a way that works for you and those you care for.
  • Decide on your obligations and meet them while building the world you want.

Productivity Journal

Tasks – Pen and Paper – or – Digital?

I've heard whispers through the Intertubes that there is discord amongst camps between those who believe pen and paper to be the superior system medium and those who drift to the digital.  I caught some wind via a pingback to marywestonn's blog in my recent post...

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