An Ass Pocket of iCal
A few posts back, I professed my love for paper. That affection runs deep already, but I stumbled onto a trick this week that makes me lust after the power of a sheet of 8.5” x 11” even more.
As I’m wont to do, I returned to the Lucky Charms, marshmallowy goodness of iCal recently to organize my stuff. I know it isn’t perfect, but it’s my comfort zone, and after flogging myself publicly over my tendency to switch systems, I decided to stick with the ol’ July 17 icon for better or for worse.
In my paper post, I mentioned that I like to jot down a few tasks at the beginning of each day, to focus my energy. It’s not GTD orthodoxy, but with a job like mine, I have to make a plan of attack or else it will be lost in a pile of board books and Legos. Normally this does the trick, but on days when I have lots of reminders, or appointments with accompanying notes, it can be tedious copying this all down. So one day this week, when I was in a hurry out the door, I decided to print out an agenda from iCal.
Maybe I’m a dope for never experimenting with this, but have you seen what you can do with iCal’s print dialog? Merlin has written about this before, but the ability to pick and choose which calendars to print, restricting the view to a day, a week, a month, or my favorite, a simple list, just made me reaffirm my vows with iCal. Here’s what I do (in Tiger, mind you, so Leopard early-adopters may have to adjust accordingly … I’m upgrading this weekend, promise):
- I keep my Next Actions/To-Do’s in separate calendars, and set tickler reminders as all-day events in the calendar. Each morning, I set a due date of that day for the items I’d theoretically like to tackle by EOB, and sort my calendars by due date so they float to the top of the list.
- Next, I pop open the print dialog (“
File > Print” or “Cmd-P”). I select “List” from the “View:” dropdown, then make sure all the right calendars/contexts are selected. I also check every other option except “Black and White”, because I’m accustomed to the various colors I assigned to my calendars as visual reminders (if this doesn’t matter to you, check that box and save yourself some ink). - Finally, I fold it up in quarters and put it in my back pocket. Throughout the day I can cross things off and use the white space as an inbox. Then, at the end of the day, I reconcile everything with the mothership. On days when I’m going to the gym, I even print my workout routine checklist on the backside to really feel the burn.
Maybe this isn’t rocket science, and iPhone and mobile sync bandits may scoff at the manual approach. Personally, I hate printers too, but this little trick has given my sad little Canon i960 new life.
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Digital and paper hybrids DO work!
I feel the affirmation, reading your post...
I've recently experimented--successfully--with a printed template of my work month that I sync manually with my Outlook.
it's an extension of my GTD system.
I remember in Merlin and The David's podcast series, how David said that digital and paper are just outward expressions of the GTDing that's going on inwardly (not his exact words).
well, I found this system works very well, giving me a solid, tactile sheet of deadlines (it's a specific tracking device for a specific kind of work - copywriting) while being able to capture everything else in the dynamic "marshmallowy goodness" of my digital systems.
a monthly paper template that I fill in by pen.
synced by hand with my task list in Outlook.
a very usable system that geeks me out.
I write about it at http://blog.passionista.net/2007/10/time-management-it-not-what-you-take...
I hope someone else finds it useful too!