Day Planner
July 26th, 2006
Day Planner
Procrastination is a Buzzword you hear from software and management people quite often these days. Just about everyone who has some freedom in timing his tasks seems to suffer from it. Students of course also fall under this category and I’ve had this problem since first grade.
Being a programmer, a CS student, an RSS addict and having a lot of time-intensive hobbies, keeping track of what I’m actually doing all day hasn’t become easier since school.
I’m aware of techniques like GTD, which seems to be all the rage right now but I’ve always considered it a bit too extreme for me. I also like to keep it simple, stupid to I’ve been looking for alternatives to suit my style of living and working better.
Yesterday I stumbled upon the Emergent Task Timer from David Seahs Printable CEO Series, which is a sheet to make you keep track of what you’re doing in the course of a day, helping you to discover patterns or problems in your schedule.
I liked the idea very much but it still didn’t really fit my needs. On the one hand, by the layout of the Sheet you are confined to a limited set of tasks, on the other hand, Seahs Sheet only has 12 hours whereas my day consists of up to 18 (6h-23h). Being wasted from sitting at the desk, staring at the screen all day, I went to bed shortly after 23h last night and turned on the TV for a while. Well, well, as chance would have it, I tuned right into a documentary about procrastination. Watching it, I got an idea about what my solution to the problem could be:
In order to keep me from getting distracted, I had to tightly plan my day, filling it up with tasks the night before and then following that plan strictly. I got up, set down on my desk and planned for today: Getting up, cleaning the hallway, work on the job, learn for EE, lunch, learning and being done at 16:30. I was sceptical how this would turn out, but today at 16:30 I really was done with everything.
For the purpose of not having to waste a fresh sheet of paper each day for my plan, I opened up OpenOffice and designed a timetable of my own, using what I had in the back of my mind from Seahs Table and came up with my Day Planner.
Put in a clear plastic folder and taped to my drawer, I can plan my days with a non-permanent marker, wipe and repeat every day. I’ll continue to use this for a week and report on my experiences then.
Download:
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