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| Use this thread to discuss the following entry from Steve Pavlina's blog: How to Create a Personal Productivity Scaffold |
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| Hi Steve - I think morning routines are powerful. I have a routine (or scaffold, if you like) that I've been fine tuning and adjusting for the past two years. I also added something slick this morning to change things up. I heard through a teleseminar about a great way to harness the Law of Attraction. The speaker (I don't recall her name) calls it the, 'Appreciation Sob'. This speaker was a highschool drop out, runaway and lost her job early in her career. Ten years have past and she has advised 2 presidents, has built and sold 8 companies with a net return on investment of 700%! I wish I could remember her name.... She was really powerful. Anyways, the speaker on the teleseminar said to find a quiet space and think about all the things you are grateful for until you start to cry... then keep going. That sort of crying were you're so full of joy that you can't take anything else in. I thought it was a great idea. I tried it out this morning and cried my eyes out at the parking lot by the train station. Man, it felt good to have a good cry. I feel awesome this morning. I can't wait to see what happens this week. Stephen Martile — Personal Development with NLP |
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| I kind of did this two weeks ago. So far it has worked very well. I wanted to take walks every morning to get more energy and waking up early in an easier manner (I usually oversleep). I tried 30-day trials etc but since I didn't really know, in my body, that I would feel more energized I always failed. It felt better to stay home and sleep some more. Then I found this website (joesgoals.com) where you can set up you habits and assign different points to them. Every day you can put one or more checks if you achieved your goal/habit. I decided to put up a couple of habits (only good ones, don't want to focus on negative habits) and it has worked great so far. I use my computer every day so I have this page as my start page. Ever since I started I go up and go for a walk every morning, not because I will feel better, but so that I would get my point for that day and heighten the total score. It's kind of a competition against myself. I also use the logbook feature every day. You can achieve the same thing in many different ways. This way worked well for me since I use my computer every day. I also started journaling at the same time (one of my goals/good habits). It is important that you choose the right goals/habits as well (I used the CARVE technique and used the scores to the different habits). Make sure you focus on things that have a longtime net effect. It would be nice to hear what other people have done with this scaffold technique. |
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| Hey Steve, I've recently come across multiple studies and references pointing out that a 3-4 hour work day is natural for humans. The studies reference cultural groups living off the land and also farmers prior to the industrial revolution. The studies point out that the 8-hour work day is a result of the industrial revolution from factory work. Doing more hours of mindless, repetitive work makes you more productive but that doesn't apply to knowledge-based work. The 8-hour work day is something that has just been carried over from factory work without any questioning. I wonder if you've come across anything similar in any of your research or if you've experimented with shorter work days and your thoughts on it. I find my personal experience correlates to these findings. It is easy to remain focused for three hours but after that my mind starts to wander. Since you're working shorter hours, you do not need to spend as much time forcing yourself to remain focused and your mind is much clearer. I can post references to the sources I've come across if anyone is interested. |
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| Quote:
I thought people worked longer hours farming before the industrial revolution? |
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| Very handy article, thanks! It's very easy to think of these sorts of plans as permanent and become overwhelmed. Will there be a follow up article on how and when to transition out of using the scaffold? Thanks. P.S. Seeker5, I'd say the missing word is "comes".
__________________ When people see things as beautiful, ugliness is created. When people see things as good, evil is created. When the way is forgotten, 'morality' and 'piety' need to be taught. -Dao De Jing, Chapter 2 Last edited by Keith : 07-20-2007 at 09:06 PM. |
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| Hey Steve - It's me again. Well something amazing happened after I told you about the Appreciation Sob exercise that I completed this morning. I was checking out my stats on my blog and noticed that someone had come to my site via a search engine using the words, 'how to become rich principles'. So I searched for this myself on Google and my blog was listed as the first link in the search! I almost crapped myself.... the Law of Attraction really works! If you want to check out this article it's called, 'The Science of Getting Rich: Principles 1-3' Cheers, Stephen Martile — Personal Development with NLP |
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| That'd be great!
__________________ Tobias Zimpel Dare To Dream! at TobiasZimpel.com You see things and say “Why?” But I see things that never were and say "Why not?” -- George Bernard Shaw |
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| The first part of the post sounded promising: Quote:
What other scaffolds are people using to help other than a morning and evening routine? I expected to see maybe a personal coach as a sort of scaffold. I need some sort of scaffolding so look forwarding to hear what other are using. All the best. |
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I label this revised template "Daily Postmortem." The reason I didn't include it with the Steve Pavlina Templates is that it would be hard to generalize it to work for everyone. It's really something you need to personalize for yourself in accordance with your values.
__________________ Steve Pavlina www.StevePavlina.com Get my new book Personal Development for Smart People (now available at Amazon.com) |
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| First post. Like another responder, I did something similar a month ago and it's helping me improve things a great deal. I tried to think of a word for what I did, but didn't come up with anything as perfect as a scaffolding. My cheesy attempt was "chrontext", a play on GTD's context, because scaffolds act like GTD contexts, but rather than being out of necessity (ie, I only have a phone on me so that's all I can do), they are out of design (this is my time to do only this sort of thing). I think something like scaffolding is missing in the perfection of GTD. Perhaps if you have a job where your time is structured it's not as necessary, but if you don't, you need to create that structure yourself. It's something in between GTD's trust-your-intuition-if-your-system-is-complete and the more conventional calendar. And it's designed to be temporary, which is great, a sort of intuition aid for the wayward. I wonder what Mr Allen would think of scaffolding. |
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| I found Steve's blog entry interesting and useful. I found the very word, scaffold, to be a helpful way of framing the concept. Quote:
This may sound like such a simple little idea, too insignificant to be worthy of mention. Yet, when I immitated my colleague and did the same thing, I found that it helped enormously to keep me more aware of the speed with which time was passing and how I was using my time. It helped me to track time and to become more conscious of how long it took me to perform certain tasks. I think the human mind (or at least my mind) can process the information from pictures more quickly than the information from text and numbers. I have found that having an analog clock within easy view is a huge improvement over the tiny digital clock at the bottom right hand corner of my computer screen. It's even an improvement over my wristwatch which, while it has an analog dial, is not "in my face" like the clock hanging on the wall next to my computer screen. |
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| This stuck to me: Quote:
Last edited by Rod Logan : 07-26-2007 at 03:07 PM. |
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| "Equalize" comes from Julie Morgenstern's book Organizing From the Inside Out. It's part of the SPACE acronym: Sort, Purge, Assign a home, Containerize, Equalize -- a system for intelligently organizing any physical space. Equalize is the maintenance part, putting everything away at the end of each day and restoring the place to a state of order. I wrote an article about that book and some other organizing ideas here: http://www.stevepavlina.com/articles...-organized.htm
__________________ Steve Pavlina www.StevePavlina.com Get my new book Personal Development for Smart People (now available at Amazon.com) |
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| This is from "Your Money or Your Life" by Joe Dominiguez and Vicki Robin (pg 221-223). It was the first time I had come across statements like this which really got me thinking. Quote:
Quote:
Our Technological Future: Shorter, 4-6 Hour Workdays Would Benefit Us All Why the 9 to 5 Office Worker Will Become a Thing of the Past And the Wikipedia article on working hours which has more in depth comments: Working time - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Quote:
A section of the wikipedia article seems to argue this as well: Quote:
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| I really wonder whether we could all get by on only 3 hours of work/day. It seems inconceivable to me to consider all jobs, especially healthcare, being run on 3 hours a day. Certainly greater hours dramatically increase economic prosperity and that would a tradeoff to a shorter workday, but I wonder if there would be any other ill effects. Theoretically, if people could get by in preindustrial times by working three hours a day, we should be able to get by in even less time due to technological advancement. |
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