Hi Gary,

The way I use them is I set up the tickler and the tickler date and then
forget about it, as one does.

Some ticklers are for tasks, some are reminders.  Reminders don't always
translate directly into a task, so my ticklers don't always turn directly
into next actions.

For the ticklers that are tasks, when the tickler comes due, I do the usual
GTD thing and decide whether it's going to take less than two minutes to do
the task or more.  If it takes less than two minutes, I simply do the task.
The tickler doesn't become a next action in this case because it gets done
immediately.  If it takes more than two minutes, then I do one of two
things:

a) If the tickler is a once-only tickler, I convert it to an action (with
the little 'make action' button) and I continue on with it the way I do with
any next action.

b) If the tickler is a repeating tickler, I don't turn the tickler into an
action, because I need the tickler to continue repeating.  In this case, I
bump the tickler's date up to whatever the next appropriate date is, and I
create a new next action for the task that the tickler has reminded me
about.  Then I proceed with the action the way I do with any action, and the
tickler continues as well.

A few of real-world examples:

I have a tickler to get my van serviced.  It's a repeating tickler that I
set to come up every three months.  It takes more than two minutes to do, so
I need a next action for it when it comes up.  It's a repeating tickler,
though.  If I changed the tickler itself into an action, I'd lose the
repeating tickler, and I don't want that.  So, when the tickler comes due, I
create a new next action, name it "Get the van serviced", set its context,
and handle it in the usual way.  As soon as I have the next action created,
I go back to the repeating tickler and update its tickler date to be three
months in the future.

I also have a tickler to pick up my cleaning in about three days.  It's a
one-time tickler -- that particular batch of cleaning will only ever be
picked up once.  The tickler's task will take more than two minutes,
however, so I will need to create a next action for it once the tickler
comes due.  So, when the tickler comes due, I'll click the tickler's 'make
action' button and turn the tickler into a next action.  I'll give the next
action a context, and then I'll handle it the usual way.

Finally, I have a tickler for a one-time transfer I need to make between two
online bank accounts.  It's a one-time transfer, and the task will take 30
seconds, tops.  So, when the tickler comes due, I'll pop up the bank account
site, make the transfer, and then mark the tickler done.  No next action
needed because the task will be a 'less than two minute' task.

Does that help at all?

Stefi

On Tue, Dec 30, 2008 at 12:46 AM, Gaz <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> Hi
>
> Apologies, should have said that I am using Monkey GTD 3.0 alpha
> r103230.
> The reason I say "supposed to" is that I am trying to understand how
> to have a tickler (reminder) but also have an action as a result of
> that.
>
> cheers
> Gary
>
> On Dec 29, 5:25 pm, Ken Girard <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Which version of the various TiddlyWiki GTD systems are you using?
> > The most common ones are D3 & MonkeyGTD, but there are a couple of
> > others out there as well.
> >
>
>

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