I've just (over the past few weeks) started using OF to keep track of my stuff to do, long-range projects, chores, errands etc.
The one thing I'm finding a little unwieldy is deadlines. I'll sometimes artificially set a deadline for something that doesn't HAVE to get done at any particular time and then maybe find I'm not getting it done by that date.
Here's an example: I need to replace a couple of window blinds in my apartment. They still work, but they're getting kind of beat up. It's not a huge deal, but something I'd like fixed at some point. I set up one project ("replace blinds") and within that three actions: "measure old blinds" (@home); "buy new blinds" (@hardware store); and "install new blinds" (@home). So far so good.
Back when I did this a couple weeks ago, I set a deadline of today for this totally arbitrarily. Now I find I'm a little busy at the moment and it's like 900° outside and I'd rather not schlep to the hardware store. So while I'd LIKE to have new blinds, it's not up at the top of my priority list.
So do I remove the deadline altogether, and just rely on the blinds becoming annoying to me (or breaking completely) as an external stimulus? Do I just set a deadline a couple months down the road and hopefully get to it before then?
Maybe this is just a motivation/procrastination problem that no GTD system will solve, but I'd be curious how others approach low-priority projects, or things that don't really have to be done by any particular time.
The one thing I'm finding a little unwieldy is deadlines. I'll sometimes artificially set a deadline for something that doesn't HAVE to get done at any particular time and then maybe find I'm not getting it done by that date.
Here's an example: I need to replace a couple of window blinds in my apartment. They still work, but they're getting kind of beat up. It's not a huge deal, but something I'd like fixed at some point. I set up one project ("replace blinds") and within that three actions: "measure old blinds" (@home); "buy new blinds" (@hardware store); and "install new blinds" (@home). So far so good.
Back when I did this a couple weeks ago, I set a deadline of today for this totally arbitrarily. Now I find I'm a little busy at the moment and it's like 900° outside and I'd rather not schlep to the hardware store. So while I'd LIKE to have new blinds, it's not up at the top of my priority list.
So do I remove the deadline altogether, and just rely on the blinds becoming annoying to me (or breaking completely) as an external stimulus? Do I just set a deadline a couple months down the road and hopefully get to it before then?
Maybe this is just a motivation/procrastination problem that no GTD system will solve, but I'd be curious how others approach low-priority projects, or things that don't really have to be done by any particular time.