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text/gemini; lang=en # Dot & Do Time for some GTD heresy in this šŸ since youā€™re not supposed to do any prioritization at all according to the canon. Hereā€™s something Iā€™ve been using since almost day one for me back in 2006. When I was using a paper system, I drew a box in front of every task. I put a dot in the box. Then a checkmark means Iā€™ve done it, an X means Iā€™ve decided to not do it, and slash through the box means that Iā€™ve moved it to another page or another list. Whatā€™s neat is that these same marks work whether or not there is a dot under them, they hide the dot, so I can use the exact same notation for undotted boxes. I got this system from some jerks online, the rest of their system sucks but this is still a good notation that Iā€™m used to, whenever Iā€™m on paper. Currently Iā€™m on digital but most of these apps have some way of flagging or starring or marking your fave tasks. I dot the things I most wanna do so they stand out. When Iā€™m in a context I then can do the dotted things first, and then I might do some more, undotted things, before I leave that context. Iā€™m already at the grocery store, might as well get paper clips and garlic since they are both on my list even though the urgent thing is envelopes. Or whatever. This helps me from getting overwhelmed when Iā€™ve got a lot on my lists. Since GTD tasks (probably better known as ā€œactionsā€) sometimes can get a little bit too separated from projects, dotting based on the most important projects can be really awesome making sure I donā€™t miss the most clutch things. ## The Chain Here is something that I donā€™t do all the time but I go through periods of doing it since it can really help when I have low focus and a hard time making decisions or doing things. Itā€™s based on something Mark Forster came up with; he called it the ā€œFinal Versionā€. I put my GTD system in a mode where I can see all actions from all contexts in one big list, still sorted by context. I look at the top action. Letā€™s say itā€™s distimming the doshes. I ask myself ā€œWhat do I want to do the most right now, rest or distim the doshes?ā€ If the answer is the latter, I dot the action. Then I look at the next action. Letā€™s say itā€™s laminating the stasis. I ask myself ā€œWhat do I want to do right now, distim the doshes or laminate the stasis?ā€ If the answer is the former, I do not dot the action. I only compare things to the most recently dotted thing and go through the whole list. That way each thing is more something I wanna do than the previous one. I get a lot of mileage out varying the criteria. ā€œWhat do I want to do firstā€, ā€œWhat do I feel the most resistance towardsā€, ā€œWhat is the biggest rock?ā€, ā€œWhat would be the most restful of X and Y because Iā€™m tiredā€ and so on. That sounds dumb but it really helped motivate me. Or sometimes skipping the comparison and instead dotting a specific kind of thing like ā€œwhat are some tiny low-hangingā€“fruit tasksā€. Then you have a list of tasks in a good order, a ā€œchainā€ if you will, and youā€™re supposed to do them starting with the lowest first and that can work pretty great! Forster then cooked up with something called ā€œFinal Version Perfectedā€ where you partially re-dot the chain after everything you do. I never got along with that version at all; if the chain gets overly stale I just delete all the dots and start over. ## Why & when do I use this? I donā€™t always use the dot&do and when I do, I donā€™t always do ā€œthe chainā€ variant of it. I primarily use GTD. Itā€™s just a way for me to cut through overwhelm. GTD is good at making me decide one thing to do and then I know that thatā€™s the best thing to do. I sometimes find it a little bit exhausting to dive all the way into the system between every task, and a relief from that can be to dot a handful of tasks, so I know that I have a couple of things that I know for sure I wanna do before diving back down again. And thatā€™s why the ā€œFinal Version Perfectedā€ version failed for me, since itā€™s based on having to dive back in between every task instead of just doing a bunch of chained up tasks in a row. => https://food.unl.edu/put-big-rocks-first Put In The Big Rocks First! => http://www.43folders.com/node/47475/319909 Ganging your mosquito tasks => http://markforster.squarespace.com/blog/2021/11/16/the-final-version-perfected-fvp-instructions-reposted.html The Final Version Perfected (FVP) Instructions
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