On Fri, Nov 27, 2009 at 9:21 PM, John Holden <[email protected]> wrote:
> If you're getting lost with context-based next action lists, perhaps you
> should review your contexts and challenge whether they actually work for
> you?  Are they relevant to how your work/life is structured?  My "At Office"
> list gets very long and out-of-control, as does my "At Computer".  This is
> because my computer is at the office (!) and the risk is that everything
> gets added to one of these lists.  At the moment I am focusing on getting
> the lists done, rather than worrying about how they should be organised!
> Maybe you need fewer contexts?  Maybe more?  Probably different.  Worth a
> think about why you get lost quickly.

That sounds a lot like my situation. Basically, everything goes into
the category "Office". I then decide what to put on my daily todo list
based on what's most important/interesting/urgent/etc. I find that I
end up putting myself in the context needed to do the next task for
the project at hand instead of figuring out what context I'm in and
running through that context's action list. I've been creating daily
todo lists by creating a project for each day, and tagging other
projects/tasks with that 'day'.

Thanks!

-- 
Jeff

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