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7 Simple Time Management Rules For the Super Busy

Businessman Busy

It can be overwhelming. And typical time-management systems don’t help much — writing all tasks and appointments and errands in a planner or task or project-management software just makes you feel more overwhelmed, and you feel guilty when nothing goes as planned and you end the day with a to-do list even longer than when you started.

So what’s a busy person to do? Throw out the traditional systems and learn a more focused, yet free-flowing system that changes with the situation and doesn’t make you feel obligated to do everything on your list.

Throw out your schedule and you’ll never feel guilty about not keeping it again.

Does that mean you won’t get things done? Not at all — in fact, if you learn to work effectively, you can simplify your time-management system, reduce stress, and yet accomplish more.

Here’s how:

Instead, schedule as little as possible. Sure, there will always be some appointments that need to be plugged into a calendar, but everything else should be open. What do you do with that open time? Go with the flow, focus on important things, and take one thing at a time. See the following items for more.

There’s no way to plan for the unexpected, so don’t try. Just learn to deal with them as they come up, and figure out what’s most important to deal with right now, and take everything in stride. Nothing is an emergency — except for actual emergencies like heart and terrorist attacks. Everything else — you can deal with it calmly and appropriately.

Try to reduce the number of tasks you do each day, but make each one count for more. Think of it as concentrating your productivity — instead of spreading yourself out thin with lots of little, unimportant tasks, make the most of your time by just focusing on fewer but higher-impact tasks. Your time is valuable, after all.

So how do I do all this? Easy: one thing at a time. It’s easy to get caught up trying to do everything at once, making phone calls and sending emails while checking emails and writing and doing Instant Messaging, all at the same time. And yet, it’s hard to actually accomplish anything in this mode. I’ve found that it’s much more effective, and much less stressful, if you focus on just one thing at a time, get it done, and move on to the next thing. You’ll be amazed at how much you get done this way.

Instead, get out of commitments by telling people, honestly, that you don’t have the time to do this right now. People might not be happy about it, but you have to be realistic with them and with yourself. Cutting back on commitments will open up your schedule and free up time for the more important things.

 

Read more about creating simplifying to become more effective in Leo’s new book, The Power of Less.

Written on 1/05/2009 by Leo Babauta, author of The Power of Less and writer of the popular Zen Habits blog. Photo Credit: This Year’s Love
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