New Direction for LJ
Mar. 16th, 2014 09:58 pmI've been thinking that I'm too scattered. Too quick to jump from idea to idea and plan to plan.
So next I thought: How do I stabilize myself? Especially given how I live my life / my job, this seems like it might be a bit tricky.
The solution, I think, might be to keep a log. Something that is ongoing and focuses on several 'silos' or columns of important concepts in my life. That way I can work on keeping steady forward progress towards clear goals in each silo.
As an example, one might be:
Fitness
Goal: Lose ten pounds.
Update: Yesterday I blah blah blahed and ate fairly healthy with the exception of... Also did 15 minutes on the elliptical.
Currently, I'm thinking the silos should be:
1. Fitness / Health
2. Art / Culture
3. Adventure
4. Social / Dating
5. Finance / Business / Work
Still working on what they should be though. I want general areas, so that they encompass more than just one element of my life, while still catching all major components. The idea is to make these posts simple conceptually so that if I want to keep it quick (while still keeping it structured) that's easy, but it also has the flexibility to be as complicated or 'deep' as I'm feeling that day (while still maintaining that structure).
So what do you think? What should my silos be?
So next I thought: How do I stabilize myself? Especially given how I live my life / my job, this seems like it might be a bit tricky.
The solution, I think, might be to keep a log. Something that is ongoing and focuses on several 'silos' or columns of important concepts in my life. That way I can work on keeping steady forward progress towards clear goals in each silo.
As an example, one might be:
Fitness
Goal: Lose ten pounds.
Update: Yesterday I blah blah blahed and ate fairly healthy with the exception of... Also did 15 minutes on the elliptical.
Currently, I'm thinking the silos should be:
1. Fitness / Health
2. Art / Culture
3. Adventure
4. Social / Dating
5. Finance / Business / Work
Still working on what they should be though. I want general areas, so that they encompass more than just one element of my life, while still catching all major components. The idea is to make these posts simple conceptually so that if I want to keep it quick (while still keeping it structured) that's easy, but it also has the flexibility to be as complicated or 'deep' as I'm feeling that day (while still maintaining that structure).
So what do you think? What should my silos be?
no subject
Date: 2014-03-18 02:29 am (UTC)That's kinda what inspired this post. The idea is that I could do something standardized, to keep moving forward rather than fear the "what should I write about today?" dilemma. Believe it or not, that sort of thing stops me pretty frequently.
Yeah -
Maybe something like Planning / Working On / Enjoying - all in relation to artwork. Should work in a motivation sense because it will get me talking about stuff I'm working on, and when there's no forward progress, I'll feel like an ass.
Plus it will get some activity going on the blog there.
Anyway. Speaking of just getting a move on and being productive...
*poof*
no subject
Date: 2014-03-18 06:43 pm (UTC)For example, I want to lose 10 pounds. My first goal was to track my calories every day and not lie about it, even if I screwed up. I have been successful. Second goal is to be under my calorie goal every day. The losing 10 pounds part will come out of goal #2, but the point is that what I am doing is specific, constant and measurable, I am not just deciding to lose 10 pounds, because that's vague and vague never works for me.
Another thing that works for me is to change one or two things at a time, three at the most. When I try to make too many changes at once, I get overwhelmed and I fail. So I suggest picking one to three things that you want to work on, set specific, measurable goals and blog at the same time every week (or day or whatever) about your progress. Always record your progress and never lie. You can make the post private, you can select a small group to see it, but be honest with yourself and be accountable to yourself because if you don't document your screw-ups as well as your successes, it's a lot easier to allow yourself to fail. Also, if you keep recording for a while, you can look back and see your process and feel a real sense of achievement.
As Jillbot says, don't get too bogged down worrying about the toolset. Figure out the GOAL and how you will achieve it, specific action by action, then document however the hell you feel like as long as you're consistent - same information, same time every week. Also, if you are posting your progress, that may spark other thoughts/ideas and you will end up with some interesting posts.
I hope that helps. I am having a very fuzzy brain day today.