An Easy Way to Stop Forgetting

  1. Your Attention is Your Most Valuable Commodity
  2. The Punch Line – Consistency Over Perfection
  3. Physical or Digital – Find Your Idiosyncratic Efficiencies

Your Attention is Your Most Valuable Commodity

The average persons short-term memory has been mutilated by the modern massacre of relentless stimuli and our chemical-infested food & healthcare systems. Tell me if this sounds familiar…you start your day with a list of things to do and an hour in, get a random message from a random person asking for something random–sometimes important, but usually more for them and less for you. So, you write it on a post it note, jot it in a book, put a reminder in your phone, or just tell yourself you’ll remember to do it later. Then, a week passes & that person sends another message, prompting the classic “oh shit” moment because it was forgotten or lost in the muck with everything else. This post is a little something to help alleviate that daily tug of war.

The Punch Line – Consistency Over Perfection

In one line: Having one place you always log your to-dos, reminders, & notes will minimize what falls through the cracks far more than having the perfect tool or new tech for tracking.

In one more line: Simplicity > complexity; I prefer to have a “pinned” chat with myself in Signal Messenger titled “Note to Self”–the pinning ensures that I see it every day.

In one last line: Create a system or routine so there’s a consistent time when you actually address the things on your list and be quick to eliminate non-essentials–remember, we rarely “have to do” all the things we tell ourselves we’re obligated to.

Physical or Digital – Find Your Idiosyncratic Efficiencies

Can you visualize the person who’s desk is covered in post-it notes slapped on top of post-it notes in so much abundance that they’ve become crusty and don’t even stick to the surface anymore? It’s my worst nightmare. A few thoughts on figuring on out what works for you and a snapshot of where I’ve found success.

  • Pay attention to the ways in which you learn and function best is critical
  • Focus less on what works for others who may be a model of productivity and more on what helps you make marginal improvements
  • It doesn’t matter if your method is digitized/technological or physical/pen & paper
  • Whatever you decide, make sure it’s in a place where you will see it daily (my method below)
  • If it’s not working (ie: you keep forgetting things), be quick to scrap it and try something new
  • Create boundaries between yourself and your technology use to moderate oncoming stimulus

Published by PhociANon#001

I'm passionate about sharing my ideas and synthesis of other people's ideas in a condensed manner. My hope is that it may allow people to quickly extract and apply to improve the quality of their every day lives, becoming more awakened to themselves and the universal energy that feeds all of us.

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