MissQuote
kickin' at a tin can
- Local time
- Today 1:54 PM
- Joined
- Mar 24, 2011
- Messages
- 1,169
My seemingly inability to keep a schedule/keep up on the menial tasks of life (such as tidying up the house regularly, make and keep plans for the overall betterment of my life etc.) has is becoming a serious problem.
Everything seems to have boiled down into a chaotic state, most of the time, that neither leads itself to function or any kind of personal productivity. Chaos can be good and interesting sometimes, this kind, however, sort of sucks.
So! I have a new plan. I was thinking about this all yesterday, or maybe the day before and I realised that the vast majority of the chores of "keeping up" I won't remember doing in the grand scheme of my life. Think about it, do you remember everytime you have ever brushed you teeth or tied your shoes? How about on a larger scale: how many of the days of your life that have already passed can you say you remember in even close to their entirity? How many days have you forgotton altogether? Most of our lives are completely wiped from our recallable memory, our brain takes the patterns that emerge from day to day tasks and files them away into rote files and *poof* most of that menial stuff are things that won't be recalled as ever having occured except for in concept that allows us to do them again when the need arises.
Understanding all of this my plan to become more efficiant is this, every time I think I can't be bothered to get things done I'm just going to say to myself to just do it already because the discomfort of doing it all will be mostly forgotton as never having occured, but the comfort of having a clean space, mentally and literally and metaphorically, will help me get to all that better stuff in life that I will remember to my dying day.
I am also thinking that this is a good way to reset the rote patterns in my brain, right now, because of what I have taught my brain through my own history of living, it is in automatic "whatever I'll get to it later" mode, but if I follow this new theory I can maybe make my brain tell me "better get to that now so it's over and we can move on.".
Thoughts? Insights? Other ideas?
Everything seems to have boiled down into a chaotic state, most of the time, that neither leads itself to function or any kind of personal productivity. Chaos can be good and interesting sometimes, this kind, however, sort of sucks.
So! I have a new plan. I was thinking about this all yesterday, or maybe the day before and I realised that the vast majority of the chores of "keeping up" I won't remember doing in the grand scheme of my life. Think about it, do you remember everytime you have ever brushed you teeth or tied your shoes? How about on a larger scale: how many of the days of your life that have already passed can you say you remember in even close to their entirity? How many days have you forgotton altogether? Most of our lives are completely wiped from our recallable memory, our brain takes the patterns that emerge from day to day tasks and files them away into rote files and *poof* most of that menial stuff are things that won't be recalled as ever having occured except for in concept that allows us to do them again when the need arises.
Understanding all of this my plan to become more efficiant is this, every time I think I can't be bothered to get things done I'm just going to say to myself to just do it already because the discomfort of doing it all will be mostly forgotton as never having occured, but the comfort of having a clean space, mentally and literally and metaphorically, will help me get to all that better stuff in life that I will remember to my dying day.
I am also thinking that this is a good way to reset the rote patterns in my brain, right now, because of what I have taught my brain through my own history of living, it is in automatic "whatever I'll get to it later" mode, but if I follow this new theory I can maybe make my brain tell me "better get to that now so it's over and we can move on.".
Thoughts? Insights? Other ideas?