I
don't think it does. At least not for me.
Blogs
written while the TV is on come out half baked if at all. I don't
retain a thing studying in two minute increments between getting milk
for Mackenzie and pulling Grayson off another piece of furniture? The
only thing trying to do so much at the same time does is leave me
tired and frustrated.
There
is a parallel in how I consume information. It's very hard for me to
not check Facebook, Twitter, Google Reader, etc. almost constantly
and when I see an interesting article read it right then. In our
modern age with its overabundance of content this could conceivably
keep me occupied for days at a time without accomplishing a single
step toward any of my goals. Also, shifting gears to consume content
leaves me exhausted just like trying to do multiple things at once.
The
problem is I want to do it all.
Now.
I
want to write a novel. Learn piano and guitar. Get a doctorate in
history. Travel to Manu Pichu and Japan. Get my Architectural
License. Be fit and ride my bike all the time. Remodel the house and
put an addition on.
I
could go on.
At
length.
I'm
like a hummingbird on meth. I see something shiny and I'm off. I've
struggled with this for years and made only the smallest of steps
toward reigning it in and actually getting anything done. As with
many aspects of the human condition I think this is both my greatest
strength and my greatest weakness.
My
goal is to develop the patience to wait until the right moment and
when that time comes actually do the thing I need or want to do. I
also have to have the discipline to set time aside to create the
right time. There will always be a kid to watch, something to clean
or a new bit of information to read. I have to very consciously make
time if I am going to accomplish anything. The opposite too. When I'm
with the kids I need to just be with the kids. Read when its time to
read. Practice the joy of doing one thing at a time. Be in the
moment. After all this moment is the only thing that is real.
1 comment:
Some great stuff here, Bill. This is definitely something that many of us (creatives, or productivity-aholics) deal with. I deal with it myself. Like you said, with SO many wonderful things to occupy our time, it's difficult to simply pick one, take that from beginning to end, and move on to the next item.
Thanks for writing.
Non
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