Treading Lightly
Treading Lightly

Goodbye Procrastination

The more I over-commit myself and take on too many things the more I seem to procrastinate. Making myself get things done lately is like pulling teeth, even though I like some of the things I am doing. But today, after reading Leo Babauta’s post “The Do Plan, or Why We Know But Don’t Do,” it’s time to stop letting myself avoid and start doing.

So instead of knitting the scarf for myself (more on that soon), reading a book, or wasting time online I will turn off the distractions and work for two hours. No excuses, no distractions, just me and my to do list for two hours.
I am just going to focus on being productive for two hours and see what I can get done instead of being task oriented and doing everything I can to finish that one thing. It’s time for some self-discipline and much needed productivity.

Christmas Break

Today is my first real day of Christmas break, and I am enjoying it to the fullest. I woke up and read “Eat and Run: My Unlikely Journey to Ultramarathon Greatness,” by Scott Jurek (more on that later) for an hour. I will finally massively clean our apartment today and watch some truly horrible Christmas themed TV later. I can’t wait to finally take a deep breath, catch up, and enjoy my last break before the real world is beating down my door in a few months.

It’s incredibly wonderful to be able to relax and do exactly what I want. Even though I have work to do today, and for the rest of break, at least it’s doing things I love.

Ready, set, study

Somehow it’s finals season again (it feels like every two weeks on the quarter system), but that means in less than a week I will be reading great books, baking, and knitting. I will be able to get started on my Christmas gifts and finally enjoy a couple weeks to myself without the constant deadlines of school (just my other two jobs).
crema chai tea and cinnamon
In the meantime I will be in our favorite local coffee shop sipping on a chai and trying to stay focused long enough to get everything done.

Happiness

This morning my to-do list for the next few days spilled over onto it’s third sheet of paper, the sink overflowed with dishes from last night’s late-night-baking with my roommates, and my email keeps buzzing to deliver me more notes from my bosses.

And yet as I sit here completely covered in papers from my various projects and my desktop a hodgepodge of homework, assignments, and research for work, I realize I couldn’t be happier.
There are days where I am so stressed I lose it and times when I want to lie on the couch and not do anything instead of all of the work I have, but above all my happiness is much greater than the stress. I’ve never worked on so many different projects at once or tried to balance my desire to enjoy my senior year with my amazing roommates and friends with everything I am involved in, and yet somehow I am figuring it all out.
I can’t wait to see where the rest of this year takes me.

Organize Your Life: how to get it all done

Yesterday while on a staff retreat for one of my four jobs a friend asked me how I get everything done. My first instinct was to laugh and tell her I don’t. There are always 10 more things I want to finish every day than I ever have time to even get started on. But the more I thought about it the more I realized that I do have some methods, and I get everything that is a high priority done.

This year has been my biggest challenge yet. I am taking a full load of classes, juggling four jobs, running a blog, and trying to spend time with friends and family. So far I have completed everything I needed to for all of my jobs and finished my homework, but the rest of my life falls apart at times. In the past four weeks I haven’t kept up with blogging like I had planned or made it to all of the social meetings I had said yes to. But this week I am going to readjust my schedule, make some tough decisions, and make sure I am able to fit in the things that really matter to me.
Tips to preserve your sanity while increasing your productivity:
(AKA how to get it all done)
1. Schedule: I cannot say this enough. Without a schedule there is no way to stay on track and remember everything that needs to be done in day. I schedule time for fitness, friends, and food (and everything else that’s important). When it’s on the schedule I have no excuse for why it can’t be done. (my google calendar is my best friend. I keep it on my phone, printed out in my planner, and it’s always open on my computer.)
2. Lists: I make lists. I make them constantly. I have lists about other lists. Call me crazy, but without them I will forget things or stress that I am forgetting things. These lists stop the late night epiphanies that I forgot a homework assignment or keep me from realizing when I am already 10 minutes late that I have no gas in my car and I won’t make it to my destination without stopping for some. My lists also help me to get tasks done that typically fall through the cracks like cleaning the bathroom in a semi-regular fashion.
3. Prioritize: at times I have over 20 things on my To Do List. Without a way to organize the items, I have no idea where to start. Prioritizing what you have to do will prevent wasted time and leaving things that must get done that day until it’s too late. I make a list of all of my top priorities for the day and I rank them. Even when I really want to just start with the easiest item, my top priority always has to come first. When everything feels like a huge priority, realize that you will get everything done on the list if you have been realistic with your schedule. All you need to do is get started and start hacking away at it.
4. Self-disipline and focus: You have to keep yourself on track. Your boss, professor, or mother cannot sit next to you all day and remind you to be working. Your job is to stay on task and not let yourself waste time you don’t have. Put away distractions, especially social media and often the entire internet in general. Go to a place where you get work done like the library or coffee shop. If you like to work from home, make a special space for working where you don’t let yourself get distracted.
5. Treat yourself! After all of your hard work, you need to seriously show yourself some appreciation. Have your favorite dessert, watch a TV show or a movie, go out with friends, whatever you want it to be.

My last first day of school (hopefully)

Today is my last first day of school (not counting any possible graduate school). It’s crazy to think that it was 17 years ago when I got frustrated with my mom for wanting to take pictures of my first day of preschool when I really just wanted to get to class already. (I would have shared those awesome pictures of my irritated death glare in front of the school, but I didn’t think to drag them out this summer.)

Image courtesy of Peanut Butter Fingers

Even though I am not nearly as excited to start school this year as I was then, I am still looking forward to this year. This is most likely (unless I freelance after college) my last year where napping after lunch and watching cartoons in the morning is perfectly acceptable. It’s the last time I can drop what I’m doing and go for a run any time of day. It’s also the last year that getting up at 8 a.m. is early.

Instead of a purple plastic lunch box, I will head off to school laptop in hand to tackle one last year.

Summer internship

In the past four days I have moved 50 miles away, started one of my two jobs, and started my internship. This summer I have the incredible opportunity to be an editorial intern for Yoga Journal! I had my first day today, and I can’t wait to go back. 

Image courtesy of Amazon.com
 

Tomorrow I will get back on track and start sharing all of the wonderful things I have planned.

Packing, part 1

This weekend I started the overwhelming process of packing, and in the process I took the opportunity to re-evaluate every item I was packing up. After the closet debacle, I had already mostly sorted through some of my stuff. So far I have started a pile for donation and given away a few items to my roommates.


While you are packing consider:
1. When was the last time I used or wore this? If it’s more than six months or a year, it’s time for it to move on to someone else.


2. Do I really need this?


3. Does this item take up space or truly add function to my life?


4. If I didn’t have this item, would I miss it two months later?