The Unlazy Cheat Sheet
The Unlazy Cheat Sheet
Essentialism is about how to get the right things done. It is about making the wisest
possible investment of your time and energy in order to operate at your highest point of
contribution by doing only what is essential. And when you have found the essential things,
you create a system that makes execution almost effortless.
Explore and Evaluate. Spend as much time as possible exploring, listening, debating,
questioning, and thinking. Create spaces in your life to design, concentrate and read. Keep a
journal, get out into the field and keep your eyes peeled for unusual details. Exploration is
not an end in itself, but a way to discern the vital few from the trivial many.
Eliminate. Actively eliminate activities and efforts that don’t make the highest possible
contribution. Dare to say “no” more often, get rid of unnecessary commitments and admit
mistakes fast so that you can move forward with more essential stuff. Where a non-
Essentialist asks ”What do I have to give up?”, an Essentialist asks ”What do I want to go big
on?”.
Execute. Invest the time you saved into creating a system for removing obstacles and
making execution as easy as possible. Always build buffer for unexpected events, remove
more instead of doing more (i.e. find the weakest links and remove them) and create
routines around the essential things in your life.
Start saying “no” more. Too often we say “yes” to things that do
UNLAZY not matter, just to please someone else or to prevent social
awkwardness. Limit trivialities by saying no!
ACTION Try out the 50% buffer. Take your calendar and add 50% to all your
STEPS scheduled events for the week. See how you feel after the week has
passed.
Find focus by defending your creative time blocks fiercely, alternating between mindful
(creative pursuits) and mindless (everyday chores) work and turning off your phone, email
and any apps unrelated to your task at hand. As a motivator, always aim to make progress
visible for long-term projects. Lastly, tackle the hardest tasks first in the morning.
Tame your tools by making a weekly ritual of unplugging all devices for a while and only
logging in with clear intentions (i.e. resist impulsiveness). As for email management, ‘the
most important rule in achieving your goals via your inbox is that distracting opportunities
have to die for your most important goals to live’. So, when an email asks for your focus,
think hard about whether pursuing it will help you achieve your complex goals.
Sharpen your creative mind by practicing ‘Unnecessary Creation’ (such as Morning Pages),
only aiming for less-than-perfect and frequently taking unorthodox – even wacky –
approaches to solving your stickiest problems.
The Now Habit is a strategic program to help you eliminate procrastination from your life,
bring fun and motivation back to your work and enjoy your well-earned spare time
without feeling guilty. The program consists of three main techniques.
Guilt-free play. To be more productive, you must stop putting your life off and engage
wholeheartedly in recreation and relaxation. Schedule time for play. It gives you a sense of
freedom about your life that enables you to more easily settle into focused, quality work
later on.
Unschedule. Recreate your calendar! Only schedule recreational activities and divide your
week into manageable pieces with breaks, meals, scheduled socializing, and play. In addition,
record your productive, interrupted work times. It will provide you with a prescheduled
commitment to guilt-free play, and it acts as a realistic look at the actual time available for
work and the amount of quality work you have put in.
Flow state. Learning how to tap into flow state will lessen the drudgery of work and increase
your excitement about how you work. Use focusing exercises, relaxation exercises, mental
imagery and visualization to shift your levels of consciousness and to work with greater
energy, enthusiasm and efficiency.
The ONE Thing gives you a very simple approach to productivity, based around a single habit
of asking the right question: What’s the one thing I can do, such by doing it, everything
else will be easier or unnecessary?”
First, ask the right question. Create a big and specific question, such as “What can I do to
double sales in six months?”. Convert it to the format stated above: “What’s the one thing I
can do to double sales in six months, such by doing it, everything else will be easier on
unnecessary?”
Second, find a great answer. Answers come in three categories: doable (already within your
reach), stretch (most likely some research and study is needed) and possibility (exists beyond
what is already known and being done). Always aim for the possibility. Benchmark other
high-achievers’. You’re looking for the next one thing you can do in the same direction that
the best performers are heading, or, if necessary, in an entirely new direction.
Third, your results depend on your purpose, priority and productivity. Simply pick a
direction, ‘purpose’, by finding the one thing you want your life to be about more than any
other. “You can always change your mind. It’s your life”. Then, use Goal Setting to the NOW
to find your priority. Finally, block time for your on thing every day and protect that time to
be as productive as possible.
Goal Setting to the Now
The Focusing Question Time blocking
”What’s the one thing I can Block time early in the day
do such by doing it for your one thing. Block big
everything else will be chunks of it – no less than
easier or unnecessary?” To four hours! Think of these
bring hyperfocus to your blocks as appointments with
life, ask yourself this yourself. Protect the blocks:
question repeatedly and it’s you most important
modify it to fit your needs. meeting of your day.
In a world that is changing more rapidly than ever, we need agility and flexibility. Many of
the productivity systems out there are too complex or rigid for the current environment. The
Agile Results system aims fix this by providing a simple yet effective framework for
producing results.
The system is based on outcomes instead of activities. Every day you set three outcomes
you want to achieve. Moreover, every Monday you set three outcomes you want to achieve
that week and evaluate your progress each Friday. Lastly, you set three desired outcomes
for each month and even for the whole year.
The book also lays out a massive amount of values, principles, practices and strategies,
which support the Agile Results system. To name a few, you should utilise the 80/20 rule in
everything you do, you should focus on spending more time on activities that make you
strong and you should set clear boundaries for how much time you spend on things (like
administration, work time, think time, people time).
Clear your head for productivity. Collect everything that’s on your mind, little or big.
Furthermore, every once in a while conduct a “core brain dump”, putting all your thoughts,
tasks and worries on paper. Clarify and define all the outcomes you’ve committed yourself to
accomplish, small and large, and the actions required to move on them.
Focus productively. Focus follows clarity. Determine the purpose and set a goal or a
standard for what you’re doing. If you’re unclear, stop and review your plans, do a mental
core dump, revisit the image of what success would look like or return to your own purpose.
Use your focus to find new solutions and ideas: “A change in focus [or perspective] equals a
change in results”.
Create structures that work. Use systems and routines to make your task management
effortless and effective. You have to be able to fully trust in your system, so that you don’t
waste any brain power on it – “the effectiveness of your system is inversely proportional to
your awareness of it”.
Relax and get in motion. Remember: your ability to be productive is directly proportional to
your ability to relax. Let go, relax, refocus to gain inertia. Also, to start small – “the small
actions we engage in regularly are the linchpins to the major results we experience”.
1. Health. Focus on what you put into your body and what you do with your body. You
must eat a nutritional diet, exercise regularly, eliminate harmful substances and treat
your body as your temple.
3. Passions. To find your passions, get rid of the four ‘anchors’ in your life: identity, status,
certainty and money. Then ask yourself: “What excites you the most for the longest
period of time?”. That is likely your passion.
4. Growth. You must continue to grow and make changes even after you’ve found your
passion. Take small steps each day; they’ll lead to giant leaps in the long term.
5. Contribution. A life without contribution is a life without meaning. Once you’ve achieved
great health, great relationships, found your passion and you’ve grown, it’s time to help
others.
The ultimate listing of all the resources for working smarter and making living easier.
Lightweight book offering simple tips on how to be more productive both personally and
professionally.
Prework. First, conduct a personal prework. You’ll write down your inner values (e.g.
openness, integrity, giving to others), personal values (e.g. living in balance, ability to travel)
and top 3 decision making factors (e.g. “Will it make me happy?”, “Is this a choice for
personal growth?”). You should also conduct daily prework, where you set the top 3 priorities
for the day, your difficult morning task and your low-priority tasks.
Daily schedules. Start with a morning routine. Work in action block of 3-4 hours. Increase
your accountability by sharing your progress with a friend. Have lunch with a mentor or an
influencer. After working for multiple hours, remember to refresh yourself with exercise,
meditation and power naps. Mix and match these routines two create various schedules for
increased productivity.
Productivity hacks. Tackle your hardest task first thing in the morning, when your
willpower is still strong and your energy is high. Have a ‘power lunch’ with an inspiring friend
for extra boost. Add some “me” time in the middle of your day, so that you have something
to look forward to.
Zen To Done is a simplified system based on David Allen’s GTD and Stephen Covey’s 7 Habits
of Successful People. It is a set of 10 habits, which should be implemented 2-3 at a time.
Habit #1: Collect thoughts and ideas. Carry a small notebook everywhere and write down
any tasks, ideas, projects or other information that might pop into your head.
Habit #2: Process those thoughts. Process all your inboxes at least once a day.
Habit #3: Plan ahead. Set three main goals for each week and each day. Be sure to
accomplish those goals early in the day.
Habit #5: Create a simple system. Keep simple lists and check them daily. One list for each
context (@work, @personal, @errands) and a projects list that you review daily or weekly.
Habit #6: Organise. Create a place for everything, all incoming stuff goes to your inboxes.
Habit #7: Review. Review your system and goals weekly, make improvements.
Habit #8: Simplify. Reduce your goals and tasks to essentials. Simplify your commitments
and your incoming information streams.
Habit #10: Find your passion. Always seek work you’re passionate about. If you’re
passionate, you won’t procrastinate.
UNLAZY Stick to habits 1-4 for 30 days. If they work and if you feel
this is the system for you, pick 3 more habits each month until
ACTION you have all habits covered.
STEPS More rad stuff at unlazyway.com!
Ready Aim Fire!
Erik Fisher & Jim Woods
“Make no mistake about it – success is found when
you combine hard work, time, and intentional goals”
First, you have to be crystallize where you are now and what are your priorities. Take
five minutes to write down how you spend most of your time and evaluate your priorities
based on that. In addition, ask for input about your priorities from five individuals you trust
and analyse the responses. Are your priorities aligned with what you want from your life?
Many of us know the Pomodoro Technique. But very few know how to use it efficiently.
After reading this book, you’ll know.
Create and update a list of things to do (the “Activity Inventory” sheet). Next to each
task, estimate the number of pomodori the task will take.
Every morning, consult your priorities and make a list on what to work on today (the “To Do
Today” sheet).
Pick an activity from the To Do Today sheet to work on. Set your timer 25 minutes. Mark
every internal interruption (your mind tells you to do something else) with an apostrophe
next to the task name and mark every external interruption (initiated by someone else) with
a dash.
Stop after 25 minutes (one pomodoro). Mark one pomodoro completed for the task on the
To Do Today sheet. Relax your body and mind for 5 minutes (break).
At the end of each day, note down statistics that you are interested in with regard to your
performance for today in the Records sheet. This could mean recording the number of
internal and external interruptions, number of pomodori completed or the average number
of pomodori used per one task.
A combination of three short books, which explore what successful people do in the
morning, on the weekends and at work.
Successful people use their morning for nurturing their careers, relationships and
themselves. They block the morning hours for strategizing and focused work, for their
families and their friends and for exercise and creative practices. Morning hours are perfect
for the most important tasks, because willpower and energy will diminish throughout the
day. They understand that if something has to happen, it has to happen first thing in the
morning.
Successful people plan their weekends for maximum rejuvenation. They commit to taking
time off and simultaneously they understand that this rest time is too precious to be totally
leisurely about leisure. They set a few enjoyable anchor events for each weekend, mixing
exercise, spiritual activities and socializing.
Every habit consists of three parts: reminder/trigger, routine and reward. Before anything
else, you should analyse your current habits and remove bad habits by removing or
replacing reminders and rewards.
First of all, you should use habits to nurture your mind. Embrace positive thinking with
affirmations and visualization. Use meditation to gain control over your racing thoughts and
emotions. Forgive fast and constantly remind yourself of things you’re grateful for. Try
something new every, be curious, face your fears and play with your strengths.
Second, contribute to your happiness. Stop being too controlling and worrying about the
things going on around you; instead, focus solely on improving yourself. Smile when you
wake up, smile every 30 minutes and smile every time you meet someone. Spend time with
your loved ones and expand your network with meaningful relationships. Always aim to see
the good in every situation and be resilient to failures.
Third, focus on financial prosperity. Invest in the right personal and professional activities
by analysing their effect on your life. Spend time with successful people and learn from
them. Clarify your long-term financial goals and break them into bite-sized pieces. Set
compelling rewards for your goals. Save at least 10% of your income each month for your
future goals. Create multiple income sources to get closer to financial freedom.
This book is a diamond. It can’t really be summarized, every word is worth reading. Hence,
here’s only a brief introduction to deep work.
To do deep work, you need to choose your deep work philosophy (monastic, bimodal,
rhythmic or journalist). Schedule deep work blocks into your calendar and build routines to
minimize friction in your transition to depth, such as choosing your deep work location,
timeframe and execution method.
You then need to execute like a business (4DX). To successfully implement high-level
strategies, focus on the wildly important, act on the lead measures, keep a compelling
scoreboard, and create a cadence of accountability.
Furthermore, you need to remove all distractions and use downtime to enhance deep
work efforts. Long stretches of intense concentration should be balanced with quality rest;
mastering the skill of rest can transform your life and make you more productive.
Social media
Grand gestures Productive meditation ’packing party’
Increase your productivity Take a period in which you’re Ban yourself from social
by increasing the perceived occupied physically but not media apps for 30 days.
importance of the task mentally – walking, jogging, After 30 days, for each app,
through grand gestures. This driving, showering – and focus ask yourself: 1) Would the
could mean radically your attention on a single well-
last thirty days have been
changing you environment, defined professional problem.
notably better if I’d been
or a significant investment Return your attention
able to use the apps? 2) Did
of time or money dedicated repeatedly to the problem to
people care that I didn’t use
toward supporting a deep strengthen your distraction-
resisting muscles. the apps? If you answer no
work task. to both questions, quit using
the app permanently
UNLAZY Analyse your to-do-list. Look at each task and ask yourself: How long
would it take to train a smart recent college graduate with no specialized
ACTION training in my field to complete this task? If the tasks are such that the
hypothetical college graduate can pick them up quickly, you’re work is
STEPS not deep. If this is the case, read Deep Work from cover to cover.
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Checklist Manifesto
Atul Gawande
“Checklists seem to provide protection against failures.
They remind us of the minimum necessary steps and
make them explicit. They not only offer the possibility
of verification but also instil a kind of discipline of
higher performance”
Keep the checklist simple and precise. Checklists shouldn’t try to spell out everything.
Instead, they provide reminders of only the most critical steps. When every single little detail
of every step is laid out, it makes the checklist too bulky and leaves no wiggle room for
creativity. Slim down the checklist to the bare necessities. Rule of thumb is to keep it
between five and nine items.
Define a clear pause point or trigger for when the checklist should be used. For example,
you could have a checklist for when you open your computer to kickstart your workday.
Use different checks for different needs and situations. Don’t try to combine everything in
one checklist. Instead, create multiple short checklists for different situations or projects.
Use checklists for learning. Learn from mistakes and constantly improve the checklist
through experience. Develop a checklist, put it into action, and observe its success. Evaluate
which steps are confusing or redundant. You can fix these as you work your way through
the list.
Complexity Communication
Pause point
Against common sense, Interestingly, checklists can
Pause points are a great checklists should also be used aid teamwork and
addition to checklists. They for complex projects and communication. A checklist
act as triggers and problems. ”Under conditions can be used to remind teams
reminders. At a pause point, of complexity, not only are that they need to emphasize
you must stop and run checklists a help, they are communication by creating a
through a set of checks required for success. There set of checks that ensure
before proceeding. must always be room for people talk and coordinate
judgment, but judgment their actions.
aided—and even enhanced—
by procedure.”
UNLAZY Create 5 checklists for your personal tasks and 5 checklists for
your work tasks. Set reminders to use them actively, observe the
ACTION results and improve the checklists over time to streamline your
STEPS tasks and processes.
The Bible for every ‘productivity junkie’ out there! In it’s essence, the GTD system can be
summarized into five phases.
1. Collect everything. Use an in-basket, paper notes, voice, email, and electronic methods
to collect 100% of everything. Minimise the number of inboxes: you should have as few
inboxes you can get by with.
2. Process everything. Go through your entries one by one, from top down. What is it? Is it
actionable? If no, then trash it, incubate it, or reference it. If yes, will it take less than 2
minutes to do? If yes, then do it. If no, then delegate it or defer it.
3. Organize the results. Organise processed material into reference systems, task and
project lists, and your calendar.
4. Reflect and improve. Set time for a weekly review to gather and process everything,
review your system and update your lists. Get clear by closing “open loops” and emptying all
your inboxes, get current by reviewing all your lists and calendar, and get creative by
generating new ideas and initiatives.
5. Engage. Tackle all your task by utilizing the Four-Criteria Model for Decision-Making, the
Threefold Model for Identifying Daily Work and the Six-Level Model for Reviewing Your Own
Work. BOOOOM!
The Natural
The Four-Criteria Model Planning Model
Emptying your RAM For Decision-Making 1) Define the purpose of
For every item in your When making a decision on the task. Why are you
inbox(es), do the following: which task to tackle, go doing the task.
Determine whether it is through these four criteria: 2) Set principles. ”I would
actionable. If it is not 1) Context. What can you do give others total control of
actionable, you can either 1) in the current this task of they..” If they
trash it, 2) incubate or 3) store environment? what?
it as reference. If it is 2) Time. What can you do 3) Crystallize outcome.
actionable, do it immediately if with the available time? What do you want to
it takes less than 2 minutes. If 3) Energy. How much energy achieve?
it takes longer, you can either
you have and how much 4) Brainstorm ways to get
1) defer it or 2) delegate it.
energy the task requires? to the outcome.
4) Priorities. Out of these 5) Organise your ideas.
tasks, which task has 6) Identify the tangible next
highest payoff? actions.
UNLAZY Implement the five phases of GTD to whatever system you are
ACTION using. No matter how you’re currently managing your tasks, these
five phases create a strong backbone for your task management.
STEPS More rad stuff at unlazyway.com!
The Subtle Art of Not Giving a F*ck
Mark Manson
“If you don’t find that meaningful something, your
fucks will be given to meaningless and frivolous
causes.”
Your problems never end. But that’s fine, because happiness comes from solving those
problems. Choose your problems wisely, and you’ll achieve happiness. Also, you must
understand that no one else is ever responsible for your situation. Sure, it might be
someone else’s fault that you’re unhappy, but it’s your responsibility to react to that
situation.
We embrace toxic exceptionalism. Nowadays being average is seen as a bad thing, even
though vast majority of life is inevitably unextraordinary. Hence, to set yourself free of
the unnecessary burden, you should recognize that you are not exceptional.
If you want to see your life and problems in a new, more positive light, you have to change
your values and the metrics you use to measure failure/success. Steer away from shitty
values like pleasure, material success, always being right and staying positive. Healthy
values can be achieved internally, shitty values rely on external factors.
You are also wrong about everything. Just as we look back in horror at the lives of people
five hundred years ago, people five hundred years from now will laugh at us and our
certainties today. And they, too, will be wrong. We’ll never be right about anything – just
less wrong then previously.
There is liberation in commitment. You’ll find increased opportunity and upside in rejecting
alternatives and distractions in favour of what you’ve chosen to truly matter to you.
Finally, in the face of the inevitability of death, there is no reason to ever give in to one’s
fear or embarrassment or shame, since it’s all just a bunch of nothing anyway; and by
spending the majority of your short life avoiding what is painful and uncomfortable, you
essentially avoid being live at all.
Manage your energy, not your time. The number of hours in a day is fixed, but the
quantity and quality of energy available to us is not. The ultimate measure of our lives is not
how much time we spend on the planet, but rather how much energy we invest in the time
we have.
Balance work with rest. Steer away from a linear life, i.e. stop spending far more energy
than what you recover or stop recovering more than you spend. We’re built to live in pulses
and rhythms, not linearly.
Accept your limitations. Be honest about your limitations and where you are now. Try to
accept that your point of view is just one of many, and not necessarily the right one. It’ll
allow you to stay flexible and figure out how to overcome barriers at work faster.
Your willpower is like a muscle. When used, it gets tired. If you don’t rest the muscle, you
can run out of strength entirely. In other words, stress & sleep deprivation kill your willpower.
To harness your willpower, create an environment that reduces stress and the number of
choices you need to make.
Feeling guilty is an anti-pattern—drop guilt and become stronger. Feeling bad after giving
in is just another source of stress that can act as an excuse for to give in or give up.
Forgiving yourself, on the other hand, enables learning and reflection.
Be aware of moral licensing and halo effects. When you do something good, you feel good
and are likely to trust your impulses –which often means giving yourself permission to do
something bad.
Treat your future self the same way you treat yourself. Remember that your future self
who receives the consequences of our present self’s actions is, indeed, still you. So be kind
to her, don’t leave him with piles of sh*t to deal with just because the present you has
preferred some short-term “solutions”. He won’t handle it then, just like you can’t handle it
now.
The Bullet Journal (or BuJo) is a notebook-based organizational system that you can use to
“track the past, organize the present, and plan for the future.” The system involves taking a
blank notebook and creating your own, ever-evolving system with which to keep all aspects
of your life organized under one roof. The following four sections serve as the framework.
Index, i.e. the table of contents for your bullet journal. As you set up the rest of your journal
you can add the names of your entries into your index to make everything easier to find.
Future log. Write down important deadlines, events, and goals you’d like to make happen in
the upcoming months. Divide these pages into thirds, and you’ve got six blocks to represent
the next six months. You can map out your future log as far in advance as you’d like.
Monthly log/task list. Write the month at the top and list the number of days in that month
down the side. Next to the dates, write the first letter of the day that each falls on. Label the
right page “Task List,” and use this page to map out a general overview of what you’d like to
accomplish that month. Next, number these pages and add them to your index.
Daily log (or “dailies”). On your next spread, write the day’s date and start listing the tasks
you’d like to accomplish, keeping each entry short and sweet (known as “rapid logging”). Use
dots for tasks, dashes for notes, circles for events, and stars for important to-dos.
UNLAZY Buy a notebook, learn the basics from bulletjournal.com and try
Bullet Journaling for 2-3 months. Aim to create a holistic life
ACTION management system with just your notebook.
STEPS More rad stuff at unlazyway.com!
Eat That Frog
Brian Tracy
“The ability to concentrate single-mindedly on your
most important task, to do it well and to finish it
completely, is the key to great success, achievement,
respect, status, and happiness in life.”
Decide on your goals. Visualise clearly what you would like each area of life (Business,
Relationships, Financial, Health, Professional Development, Social) to look like in 5, 10 and 15
years.
Plan your goals. Write a list of everything you’ll need to achieve for each of your most
impactful goals. This includes next actions, barriers, limiting factors, personal capabilities,
resources and other people involved. Use the 80/20 Pareto principle to pinpoint your most
important tasks. Prioritise your task list with the ABCDE method.
Work from lists. Always plan in advance and work from lists. Write everything down. Move
items from a master list > monthly > weekly > daily lists. Do this before the start of each
period.
Set yourself up for success. Create the time, space, energy and capabilities to work on your
most important tasks. Use time blocking, clean and organise your work area, eliminate
distractions, learn continuously and maximize your energy by focusing on your health.
Work single-mindedly on your most important task. Eat that Frog! Each day, work single-
mindedly on your hardest and most important task first thing in the morning. Do not switch
tasks, as switching has a high cost of momentum and energy. Do not stop until the task is
100% complete.
1) Idea capture list. Dumping ground for every idea and thought. Some might be actionable,
some might not be. The key is to write them all down and process them later, so that they’re
off your mind.
2) Project lists. If something requires more than two separate tasks, then it belongs on this
list. Create a new list for each project and lay out all the steps that take you from an idea to
a completed project.
Also, to create a project, schedule 30 to 45 minutes for brainstorming the tasks and
obstacles involved in the project.
3) Weekly task list. This list compiles all the routine tasks that are not part of a one-time
project and need to be completed on a regular basis (such as processing email, making
phone calls, running errands). In addition, you should add all scheduled appointments,
meetings and personal obligations as well as important tasks pulled from your project lists.
Also, do a weekly review. Ask three questions: 1) What are my personal obligations?, 2)
What are my priority projects and 3) How much time do I have?
4) List of Most Important Things (MITs). Small list (maximum of three tasks) you’ll work on
before doing anything else. One MIT should be related to your bigger goals.
Simplicity is about choosing to pay attention only to things that matter the most, and
ignoring the rest. Identify essential, eliminate the rest. Focusing only on what’s most
important allows you to spend a much greater percentage of your time on things that will
produce the most results.
Set limits to yourself. Without limits, it’s easy to assume that everything is important, and
that you’ll be able to do whatever is necessary to get everything done. Moreover, always
focus on one thing at a time. The less you switch your focus from one thing to another
(a.k.a ”multitask”), the more productive you’ll be and the faster you’ll progress. Batch
similar tasks together to preserve your focus.
Only work on a maximum of 3-4 projects at a time. Limiting your active projects preserves
your focus and attention, allowing you to actually accomplish your most important objective
quickly and move on to the next. To tackle your projects, create a list of 2-3 MITs every
morning. Your goal is to accomplish your MITs as quickly as possible. Once you accomplish
your MITs, the rest of the day is a bonus – you can use it for lower-level tasks or rest and
recover. Install or change one habit at a time, and start with small increments. Practice that
habit until it becomes second-nature, requiring no thought or willpower to do every day.
Slow down, pay attention, and enjoy the process. Consciously minimize your active
commitments, and don’t be afraid to say “no” to new ones.
STEPS Commit to one new habit. Pick just one habit and make it
your priority to stick with that habit for 66 days.
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Effortless Journaling
S.J. Scott & Barrie Davenport
“With a journal, you have the opportunity to capture
all the thoughts in your head, tease them out, mull
them over, wrestle with them, savour them and
preserve them for perpetuity.”
Journaling is one of the least expensive and most life-changing practices you can adopt. To
start, you should equip yourself with a notebook (physical or digital), a pen or pencil and a
habit tracking tool (such as Strides or Coach.me). There are many ways to keep a journal:
UNLAZY Start journaling every day. Buy a notebook and a pen, sign
up for a tracking app and choose one journaling strategy.
ACTION Journal for a month and see whether it has a positive affect
on your mood, health and productivity.
STEPS
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Writing Habit Mastery
S. J. Scott
“If I’m interested in it, there’s an audience of people
just like me who will appreciate it.”
Commit to writing a set number of words per day, whether it be 100 words or something in
the realm of 2000 words.
Establish a daily routine and an environment for writing. Set a regular time of day when
you write, commit to writing on specific days and track your word count, writing locations
and types of writing.
When you start writing, minimise all distractions. Wear earphones or earplugs, work in a
space with a closed door, put on blinders, clear your desk or table and silence all
notifications. To speed up the writing process, learn to touch type, create structured
outlines for your texts and focus on one writing project at a time. Energise yourself by
finding an ambitious writing partner, by reading related publications and by befriending an
established writer.
1) Outline. Do a brain dump and organise items so that you have a structured outline.
2) Research. Look for links, quotes, definitions and concepts to fill in the blanks.
3) Draft 1-3. Write the first draft without stopping and then edit through drafts 2-3.
4) Edit. Hire a professional editor to double-check your text.
5) Polish. Look over the edit made by the professional and make final changes.
Limiting
Writing tracker Touch typing
(incorrect) beliefs
Track your writing in time Hunt-and-peck method is
1) Fast writing is bad writing. not sufficient in today’s
blocks (30-90 minutes) in a
2) I will never make any world. Good touch typists
spreadsheet. Observe how
money from writing. produce over 60 words per
your location, the type of
3) Nobody is interested in minute, which is over
writing and the time of day
what I have to say. double the amount that a
affect your word count.
4) I can never figure out what hunt-and-peck typist
Find the optimal
to say. produces. Touch typing is
environment to maximise
5) My writing isn’t good an essential part of
your daily word count.
enough. productivity nowadays.
It all starts with becoming aware of how you use your time. Keep a time log and log every
hour for at least a week. In addition, create a “List of 100 Dreams”, a list of things you want
to achieve or experience in your life. Analyse your time log and ask yourself: “Are my actions
taking me towards my dreams and goals?”
You have to change your thinking about time. You have to believe that you do have the
time for what’s important, and reject the notion that busyness is a sign of self-worth. This
way you open yourself up to making time to your priorities and begin to appreciate every
hour to be a precious choice we get to make.
Then, in order to make the most of your time, you must understand your core
competencies and goals for your life. With that clarity, you can make better choices about
how to allocate your time at work and at home. Your work, and ideally even your leisure
time, should revolve around your core competencies. Additionally, there should be almost
nothing during your work hours that is not advancing you towards your goals. If these things
feel distant, something has to change.
Finally, remember to live a full life. Plan your leisure time and commit to activities you
enjoy. Time is too precious for us to be totally leisurely about leisure. And don’t forget
relationships. Nurture your relationships and keep your family close.
UNLAZY Create a time log. Predict how many hours you work on a
weekly basis. Log your actions in the log every hour for 1-2
ACTION weeks. How many hours did you actually work? Use the time
STEPS log to change your perception of time and to better
understand how much work you can actually finish in a week.
Continual innovation is the only way to thrive in this fast-paced world. If you’re not moving
forward personally and in your career, you’re actually moving backward compared to
everyone moving forward. Taking action, or as Godin says “poking the box,” doesn’t require
you to be right, just that you move forward. Be the initiator.
The world is moving too fast to sit in place and go through live being told what to do or
waiting for permission. You need to start taking initiative if you want to accomplish
anything meaningful. You don’t need to come up with the next world-changing idea or
giant company - your job is to bring life to something small and grow from there.
The first rule of doing work that matters is to set a schedule that your brain has to follow
and then show up to work hard.
Risk is inevitable. If you can’t fail, it doesn’t count. This is in regards to starting a new
project, it has to be one where there’s risk and something real on the table or it won’t be
worth your time.
It’s impossible to lose in life if you continue to create and ship new ideas or projects. You’ll
either succeed or fail, and both mean you’re moving forward. The worst thing you can do is
to try to fit in and limit your creative output to the world. That’s a terrible way to live!
When we lack sleep, the decision-making areas of our brain (prefrontal cortex) are not
working optimally and it is also harder to do complex things - people who are sleep
deprived are more likely to choose easy tasks compared to people with a good night’s rest.
Sleep teaches motor skills - during REM (rapid eye movement) sleep, your brain is actually
replaying the physical skills you learned that day. So practice does not make perfect - it is
practice, followed by a night of sleep, that leads to perfection.
Performance progressively worsens with greater sleep deficit. Sleeping 6 hours per night
for 10 days causes the same decrease in performance (400%) as one night with no sleep.
What’s more, even 7 hours of sleep requires you to spend 7.5–8 hours in your bed, so
considering that the average is 8 hours, we should aim to spend 8.5–9 hours in bed.
Dreams actually have a function. Dreams help us connect new information to our existing
knowledge (which helps us be more creative). Dreams also help us regulate our emotions.
There are myriad of ways to sleep better: No screens at night. Exercise, but not right
before bed. Sleep in a cold room. Take a hot bath or shower. Avoid sleeping pills. Avoid
alcohol before bed. Avoid caffeine in the afternoon. Maintain a consistent schedule.
Mood lighting. Keep the room dark.