How to master your time
The secret to mastering your time is to systematically focus
on importance and suppress urgency. Humans are pre-wired to focus on things
which demand an immediate response, like alerts on their phones – and to
postpone things which are most important, like going to the gym. You need to
reverse that, which goes against your brain and most of human society.
Look at what you spend your day doing. Most of it, I’ll warrant,
is not anything you chose – it’s what is being asked of you. Here’s how we fix
that,
• Say no.
Most of us follow an implicit social contract: when someone asks you to do
something you almost always say yes. It may feel very noble, but don’t forget
there’s a dying princess you need to save, and you just agreed to slow yourself
down because you were asked nicely. You may need to sacrifice some social
comfort to save a life (as a bonus, people tend to instinctively respect those
who can say no).
• Unplug
the TV. I haven’t had a TV signal for 7 years, which has given me about 12,376
hours more than the average American who indulges in 34 hours a week. I do
watch some shows – usually one hour a day whilst eating dinner – but only ones
I’ve chosen and bought. You can do a lot with 12,000 hours, and still keep up
with Mad Men.
• Kill
notifications. Modern technology has evolved to exploit our urgency addiction:
email, Facebook, Twitter, Quora and more will fight to distract you constantly.
Fortunately, this is easily fixed: turn off all your notifications. Choose to
check these things when you have time to be distracted – say, during a lunch
break – and work through them together, saving time.
• Schedule
your priorities. Humans are such funny critters. If you have a friend to meet,
you’ll arrange to see them at a set time. But if you have something that
matters to you more than anything – say writing a book, or going to the gym –
you won’t schedule it. You’ll just ‘get round to it’. Treat your highest priorities
like flights you have to catch: give them a set time in advance and say no to
anything that would stop you making your flight.
• First
things first. What is the single most important (not urgent) thing you could
possibly be doing? Do some of that today. Remember there’s a limitless number
of distracting stormtroopers – don’t fool yourself by thinking “if I just do
this thing first then I can”. Jedi don’t live by excuses.
• Less
volume, more time. There’s always millions of things you could be doing. The
trick is to pick no more than 1 – 3 a day, and relentlessly pursue those. Your
brain won’t like this limit. Other people won’t like this limit. Do it anyway.
Focusing your all on one task at a time is infinitely more efficient than
multi-tasking and gives you time to excel at your work.
• Ignore.
It’s rude, unprofessional and often utterly necessary. There are people you
won’t find time to reply to. There are requests you will allow yourself to
forget. You can be slow to do things like tidy up, pay bills or open mail. The
world won’t fall apart. The payoff is you get done what matters.
Thank you for reading my blog. Don’t forget to comment How
you manage your time.
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Have a nice day !
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