Breaking Down GTD

  • Things I found interesting
    • Writing down not only tasks, but also vague thoughts and things I want to do
      • It’s satisfying to gather all the seeds of next actions that will be born as a result of breaking them down
        • By gathering them all, I can eliminate unconscious seeds of next actions and feel refreshed
      • This seems to work well with Scrapbox
    • Putting tasks without considering long-term/short-term relationships
      • I felt that I had a problem of not being able to make long-term plans and spending too much time on immediate tasks (blu3mo)
        • Instead of “making long-term plans,” it’s satisfying to deal with it by “putting long-term desires/goals into the inbox” and then breaking them down into next actions
    • It enforces the decomposition of all tasks, desires, and goals into small actions, which is very good
      • I understand the importance of breaking tasks into smaller pieces, but I haven’t been thorough about it
      • It seems to have a very good effect to be thorough about it for everything
      • In the end, all tasks need to be broken down into smaller pieces, so the cognitive load of my brain is the same whether I do it just before taking action or do it in advance
        • In that case, it’s better to do it early because there are benefits to doing it early
      • Once a week, take your time to break down projects

      • Prepare for the next week so that you can spend it without hesitation

      • Then you can run through the next week. Isn’t that comfortable?

    • Thorough environmental responsibility
      • This seems to be a prerequisite

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Chapter 6: Acting in accordance with the axis (constraints, goals/ideals, values)

  • I feel like I’m already doing this (blu3mo)
  • Ah, but it seems beneficial to articulate constraints and goals and examine life from a bottom-up perspective
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    • Means that support your life

  • I personally want to do top-down writing of goals, separate from GTD (blu3mo)