Celebrating Independence From Clutter
(Also see: The Ad Hoc To-Do-List for comparison.)
How am I spending my Independence Day? I’m cleaning and organizing. Mostly cleaning. As you can see in the picture, my inbox is piled with paper in a stack three times higher than the sides of the inbox itself. And my filing boxes have another pile just as big. But they are discrete stacks, not spread all over my desk.
This is a far cry from what anyone would call a clean desk, but it’s a huge improvement for me. Sitting here typing I’m more relaxed than usual. The stacks of unresolved things still nag at me, but the psychological feel has changed. Instead of a mountain of «stuff» to be ignored, I have a stack of things yet to be worked on. In some ways, this is much more acute; the stack of things is tugging at my attention constantly. It’s possible that what I’m observing as relief here is the lack of a feeling that I have to ignore my environment in order to exist in it. The stack of things to be done actually troubles me, but I needn’t run screaming from it.
I can see why David Allen suggests taking at least an entire weekend to do this sort of collection. This is just my desk. There are other areas where I have items that need addressing. Getting this far has taken me six hours, and I haven’t gotten to the part about actually processing what’s in the inbox. I’m probably not going to even get started on that today. Tomorrow? Maybe or maybe not. The important thing is to get the space cleared so that I can start getting to work more productively and easily. I have a lot of work to do that doesn’t involve any of the things that are in either stack. Having set some goals and deadlines for myself, I’m feeling under the gun not to fall behind — and those goals and deadlines don’t leave me with much wiggle room.