First of all, this column is not about dogs of the canine variety.
I'm using the phrase "dogs" in the sense of "dog days," referring
to dull, routine, uninspiring tasks. Your "dogs" are the day-to-
day necessities that aren't interesting, but are necessary to you
or your business's survival. We ADDers have the most trouble
getting started and following through on these dog tasks. As the
new year begins, wouldn't it be great to handle those dogs
with a fresh approach?
What Are Your Dogs?
The kind of tasks that you consider dogs are those that are
tedious to YOU. Another person may consider your dogs exciting,
or a motivating ritual.
Has last year's passion become this year's dog?
People with ADD tend to get easily excited by new things, but then
become bored quickly. As a beginning copywriter in her first
advertising job, Barbara was excited to be assigned a trade ad to
write for a fastener company. But after a year of gaining
experience writing radio and newspaper advertising, a trade ad of
this type was a "dog" for her. She still had to approach it with
her best effort, even though it no longer excited her.
Dog tasks may be dogs because they're dull and easy, OR
because they're tedious and difficult.
Andre faced two dogs at home. One was the project of creating
and installing shelves for the garage. Andre had done enough
renovation work to find this simple; he put it off because it was
boring to him.
Andre's second dog involved his promise to set up
a new home computer system. Andre avoided this task because he
knew it would require hours of reading the manual and trying to
figure out the technology - it was challenging, but something he did NOT enjoy.
Andre's daughter, Claire, on the other hand, had a knack for technology.
She would enjoy setting up the PC, so it would not be a dog for her.
How to Handle Your Dogs
Have you been waiting for a sudden burst of motivation to handle
your dogs? This may work for a once-in-a-while dog. But what
about dogs with deadlines, a promise to someone else, or an
obligation to a client? The toughest dogs are open-ended projects,
where there's no definite deadline to drive you to action.
1. Create a deadline
If you don't have a real deadline, make one up. Create a serious
commitment to yourself to have the project complete by deadline.
2. Break the task into steps
Creating a list of steps allows you to gain a sense of completion
as you finish each one. Assign a deadline for each step, working
back from the main deadline.
Don't forget to include pre-steps! Andre's garage shelves
required measuring the space and taking inventory of what had
to go on the shelves, BEFORE he cut the wood.
3. Schedule "DOG TIME"
Here is the key to your strategy. Create a routine in your schedule
of certain hours that you assign to your dog tasks. Since these
tasks are tedious, you shouldn't go beyond your attention span
without taking a break.
Think about how you'd work best when assigning your dog time.
Options to consider are:
- What's the best time of day for dull, routine work
- How will you avoid interruptions
- What environment would be best for the task (home, office, café, music or silence, etc.)
- Should you schedule a variety or single task at a time
4. Determine critical factors for focus and task completion:
INTERRUPTIONS
If your success depends on not being distracted by email, phone or
people, commit to unplugging the phone, staying off email, and
informing others that you need this hour to stay focused.
LOCATION
If you get distracted at home by your own thoughts, see if you
can do the task away from home. Many people with ADD concentrate
best in cafes, train stations and doctor's offices!
DELEGATION
Is there any part of the task that can be delegated? Perhaps something
that takes you an hour to do could be done by a colleague or family
member in five minutes.
FOCUS
Try music, TV or background noise to stay focused. (I've always
found "Law and Order" to be good background stimulation, since it
doesn't require that I look at the TV set.)
STIMULATION
Set a timer for a short period of time and keep focused just until
the timer goes off.
Or, for several dog tasks, create a "circuit" of 10 minutes each,
where you'll jump from one task to another. Using a timer, see
how many tasks you can finish in an hour. (Note: This approach
is best for tasks that don't require high mental concentration!)
How to Make Dog-Handling a Habit
It will become easier to handle your dogs as you do it more often.
AUTOMATIC SCHEDULING
Consider automatically scheduling "dog time" into your
calendar. Daily, weekly, or monthly... whatever works best for
your dogs.
RITUAL TO CHECK CALENDAR
Make it a nightly and/or morning ritual to check your calendar
and take steps to ensure quality dog time.
ASSIGN SPECIFIC TASKS
Each week, assign specific tasks to your dog time schedule.
Avoid ever starting dog time without a clear sense of purpose.
Once you get into a regular habit of working dog time efficiently,
you'll see your Great Danes become Chihuahuas!
11 TELEPHONE CLASSES
for Adult ADD CHALLENGES |
 |
'Will Your Christmas Tree Still be Up in July?'
Overview of ADD
DATE: Tuesday, January 18
TIME: 7:00 OR 9:00 PM Eastern Time
Your Choice!
PLACE: At home on the phone
COST: FREE |
| Thrive with ADD kicks off 2005 with 11 teleclasses!
They're all at 9:00PM Eastern time, 90 minutes long.
Audio recording and notes included with every class.
Mark your calendars and REGISTER through www.thrivewithadd.com .
Telephone Class Schedule
WILL YOUR CHRISTMAS TREE STILL BE UP IN JULY?:
Overview of Adult ADD
Tuesday, January 18 - FREE
RELATIONSHIPS and ADD - Part 2:
Avoid Friction and Frustration
Thursday, January 20 - $20
GETTING STARTED:
Move Beyond Procrastination
Tuesday, January 25 - $29
FOLLOWING THROUGH:
From Idea to Completion
Tuesday, February 1 - $29
DEVELOP A TIME SENSE
Get Out of 'ADD Time!'
Wednesday, February 9 - $29
GET UN-STUCK with MIND-MAPPING
For Planning, Writing and Study
Tuesday, February 15 - $29
ADD and WORK
Thriving in Organizations
Wednesday, February 23 - $29
ENTREPRENEURSHIP and ADD
Potential and Pitfalls
Wednesday, March 2 - $29
RELATIONSHIPS and ADD - Part 1
Class 1 of 2
Wednesday, March 9 - $29
RELATIONSHIPS and ADD - Part 1
Class 2 of 2
Thursday, March 17 - $29
CREATING RITUALS
The Key to New Habits
Wednesday, March 9 - $29
Click here for REGISTRATION and DETAILS. |
|