Hi Jeff

Whilst GTD does not promote the use of daily to do lists, it does promote do
what works.

I will often generate a daily to do list from my context based list (first
thing in the morning)  and just work from that list for the whole day.  The
thing NOT to do is to reuse that same list the next day.  The construct of
projects, actions and hidden dependent actions should help reduce the
clutter.

I my work area I have over 120 different tasks to do.  Going to that list
constantly during the day becomes overwhelming and confusing.  Scanning the
list in the morning and allowing the natural priorities reveal themselves to
me, which allows for my 'daily to do list' to be generated, creates a good
balance.  I knock off the daily list, or not.  I update the next day.  If
something else lands on my desk, I know that I can evaluate it against my
'today' list as to what to do now knowing tomorrow I will evaluate it
against the bigger picture.

Well, that is what works for me, anyway.

Matt V

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