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Jeff Covey: Running a _Progressive_ Dash
Merlin Mann | Sep 28 2005
Reader Jeff Covey shares how he’s started beating procrastination with a dash. Jeff’s system features a very fast daily start-up and a clever way to make sure every to-do gets touched first thing every morning. Running a Progressive Dashby Jeff Covey The recent post about running a dash gave me an idea which has turned out to be a good way to get myself in motion. It’s something like a train pulling out of a station, with a lot of force and effort at the beginning leading to smooth gliding through the long haul. One of my gtd scripts is named "tenmins", and I’ve used it to make sure I put at least a little time into each of my next actions lists each day. As the name implies, I picked ten minutes as the arbitrary amount of time to give each category of work. tenmins would look through my lists for any which had items waiting to be done. Then it would say, for example, "work on phone calls", display a timer counting down the time remaining, and pop up a message saying "stop" when the time was up. Last week, I decided to try putting tenmins on a loop which starts with one minute for each category and adds another minute on each iteration. I start the day with an all-out sprint through my work landscape with a minute for each actions list, then stretch out with two minutes for each, then three and four and so on. I’m finding a number of benefits hiding in this simple trick:
I’ve liked this so well that I’ve added three more notices to the end of the tenmins loop:
I wouldn’t recommend this as a regular means of working; constantly changing from one project to another can break your chain of thought. It can frustrate you when you come back to something and have to spend time getting back into the flow of it, trying to retrace where you were headed before the last interruption. But though it may not be the best way to choose how to use your time all the time, it can be a good trick for getting you moving on all fronts, especially if you’re not sure what to do next. 11 Comments
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![]() Wow - that's fascinating. I...Submitted by Josh Rothman (not verified) on September 28, 2005 - 3:20am.
Wow - that’s fascinating. I often have a lot of trouble getting started in the morning; I wake up early, around six, but it seems that between breakfast, the gym, getting dressed, and so on I don’t really get to work properly until 9:30 or so. Thanks for the post. »
![]() Apologies if this is a...Submitted by Craig (not verified) on September 28, 2005 - 4:44am.
Apologies if this is a dumb question, but what exactly do you mean by “script.” Is this a shell script running on your computer? I’d be interested in hearing more of the how-to for this procedure, which sounds intriguing. »
![]() Fascinating post; thanks!...Submitted by TJIC (not verified) on September 28, 2005 - 4:52am.
Fascinating post; thanks! »
@Craig: I asked the same...Submitted by Merlin Mann on September 28, 2005 - 4:56am.
@Craig: I asked the same question. :) Jeff indicates it’s a pretty hacky perl script he threw together—the kind of thing Danny O’Brien calls a “secret script” because you’d never show the code to anyone. ;) Anybody want to throw together a script that does the progressive thing and share it? I wonder if you could make something that throws a popup or maybe a Growl notification. »
![]() I've found that 'dashing' can...Submitted by Kevin Newsom (not verified) on September 28, 2005 - 5:36am.
I’ve found that ‘dashing’ can for work music practice. Often in working on techinque or a particular passage, the practice involved is mind-numbingly boring. When I run into something that needs deep practicing, I’ll often set a timer for 10-15 minutes (sometimes shorter) and concentrate on just one aspect of the technique that is giving me the problem. I find that I can stay focused on that practice task for the duration of the timer. In addition, this is usually longer that the time I would spend if I just sat down and banged away at it for a few mintues until I got bored and either left practicing or moved on to something easier. »
![]() ok, i put the two...Submitted by jeffcovey (not verified) on September 28, 2005 - 6:36am.
ok, i put the two relevant scripts here: you can probably easily hack tenmins to work with your gtd setup, but it’s only useful out of the box with my ~/bin/gtd (which is truly wholly unfit for public consumption :). »
![]() Minuteur (mentioned several places at...Submitted by Paul Morganthall (not verified) on September 28, 2005 - 9:14am.
Minuteur (mentioned several places at 43F (http://www.43folders.com/remainders/) works pretty well as a repeating timer. When you acknowledge the timer with “return” or “enter”, it automatically starts the countdown again. You can easily change the time from the keyboard (type “300” for your 3-minute runs). Once the timer has expired, the display continues to count, so you can see how much you went over. But I’m giving up that excessive attention to detail for Discardia. »
![]() This is an awesome post....Submitted by Paul (not verified) on September 28, 2005 - 4:15pm.
This is an awesome post. The problem of choosing which of several dozen things to work on has no perfect solution so this increasing rotation is brilliant! Thanks for the idea. »
![]() I know most folks here...Submitted by ConradGempf (not verified) on September 28, 2005 - 9:08pm.
I know most folks here are probably hipster users, but if you have a Palm you will love a Freeware program called “PocketDoan”. It’s a wonderful little timer designed for meditation sessions but great for other things because it allows you construct complex “Sessions” made up of shorter segments. So you could construct a “tenmins” Session made up of segments with names like “Work on Phone Calls”. During that segment, those words would show on screen, with a pie-charty circle counting down and at the end of the segment a chime sound of your choice would ring, and the next ‘segment’ in the session would begin. PocketDoan is available from www.freewarepalm.com http://www.freewarepalm.com/clock/pocketdoan.shtml »
![]() I made a Flash program...Submitted by Mohan Karulkar (not verified) on October 1, 2005 - 8:12am.
I made a Flash program that handles this - it works pretty nicely and has a lot of functionality. I’ve submitted it to Merlin and he’s taking a look at it. In the meantime, feel free to check it out! This one is web-embedded, but there are links to stand-alone Windows and Mac versions as well. http://netfiles.uiuc.edu/karulkar/www/dash Mo »
About Merlin MannBio Merlin Mann is an independent writer, speaker, and broadcaster. He’s best known for being the guy who started the website you’re reading right now. He lives in San Francisco, does lots of public speaking, and helps make cool things like You Look Nice Today. Also? He looks like this, answers questions, and has something like a life. Merlin’s favorite thing he’s written recently is a short essay called, “Better.” |
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