Tuesday, May 31, 2011

Six Action & Awareness Steps to Success - Dumbing it Down

0 to 1 - Cleaning and Clearing: Example: Gather/Collect all lists and notes, weed out the duplicates, old documents and stuff I don't need. Clear the decks, simplify the point of focus, then:

1 to 2 - Focusing & Vision: Having simplified and narrowed down the point of focus, one step/item at a time visualize/determine the desired outcome and next action steps for each, begin to implement, then:

2 to 3 - Structure & Organizing: Streamlined efficiency and maximum productivity. Blueprints, plans, lists, mind rooms, etc. Create a meaningful system of implementation, based on efficiency AND aesthetic/creative considerations, giving importance to every last detail, recall what needs to get done and cover every loose end, then:

3 to 4 - Review/Prepare/Choose & Take Action: Have all predefined work ready to go on cue. Be ready to take appropriate action(s) at appropriate time(s). Dive in, give thinking mind a rest and just DO THE WORK... Show Up and Complete the Job, perform a daily regimen without fail, then cross off all tasks off to-do list(s).

4 to 5 - Concentration/Insight/Re-Invention: A constant upgrading and unfolding of new brilliant, creative ideas, the result of hard work, perspiration, full attention and dedication/determination.

5 to 6 - Imagination/Dreaming/Intuition & Digestion: The internalization of experience, rest from action, reflection, rejuvenation and relaxation, prayer and meditation. The primary internal determining factor (the inner life) of all that manifests outwardly. The end that precedes new beginnings...

JDZ

*Each step comes in twos, a transition from one phase of activity to the next, showing the interrelationship of each to each other.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

Set The Controls For The Heart Of The Sun

Cockpit ready for take off... Destination: The Heart of the Sun, E.T.A. uncertain. Take the controls and get ready for the RIDE OF YOUR LIFE...

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

Two GTD Keys for Creating and Completing

Years ago, a friend added to my understanding of the fundamental duality of our universe by sharing this observation: "There are only two problems in life: you know what you want and you don't know how to get it; or you don't know what you want." This proposes only two solutions: (1) focus, then (2) organize and allocate your resources. Intend and execute. Create and complete. Make it up, and make it happen.

Most of the techniques and tools about productivity have focused on the responsive side: how do I best deal with all the things I have to manage, or the tasks I need to handle that have been generated prior to this moment? This focus on organizing tools makes sense, because how we can handle the results of our inspirations encompasses many more concrete options than how we engage in the creative process to begin with. There are always better computer programs to support architectural design, better paint for a specific technique on the canvas, and better smart phones and software for tracking our appointments and tasks.

But what about producing the inspiration for a building? Or the artistic expression that seeks a medium? Or the choice of this or that profession that generates my appointments and tasks? On this "make it up" side, a plethora of leadership, creativity and life-management treatises continues to flood bookstores.

In truth, you cannot be maximally productive without ensuring your focus is optimal, as well as your procedures and tools for manifesting it. Being productive means you have to produce something, and that means achieving closure on some commitment. But this comes in many forms. There's your commitment to pick up bread on the way home from work, and the one that says you need to fulfill your destiny on the planet. And a whole bunch in between.

And though the investments of our focus are multitudinous and wide-ranging, being productive with our energy requires that they somehow tie together. If you stop to buy bread on the way home and that activity is not in alignment with what you're here to do as a human consciousness, then you're not being productive at the highest rate. If it is the best thing for you to be doing, given all the possibilities, then you are. But if buying bread makes absolutely no difference to how well you manifest your life purpose, you'll need to ensure you don't unproductively wrap yourself around some inappropriate concern.

All of which is to say that if you think being more productive is simply about getting more organized, or setting priorities or goals, or working harder, you've likely missed the whole picture. Each of those activities could, at any moment, be the thing that will make most difference for you in moving along the continuum from feeling a victim of life to being more in charge. So if you know clearly what you're doing, then efficiency is your only improvement opportunity. But do you really know what you're doing? Perhaps that frontier holds the key to your greatest progression. And perhaps it's both. I don't know many who have each of these two aspects of the life experience totally nailed down. Some people have a neat, organized life, but a gnawing frustration that something better awaits them beyond their tidy universe. Many others allow themselves to engage in commitments they are woefully negligent in managing day-to-day. The savviest admit to openness to a new level of both: how much clearer can I be about what I need to do, and how much better can I get at doing it?

If this informs your overall approach, a marvelous synergy appears. As you get more efficient, you'll get more inspired. And as you get more turned on by what you're doing, you'll automatically have more juice to put it in motion quickly and easily.

Any functional solution to managing yourself, time, a corporation or a country, comes down to a combination of both sides of this equation. Both aspects—outcome focus and action engagement—are essential. The reason there seems to be an unending stream of time/business management and leadership "principles" is because few account for the whole picture. Most of the proffered keys to productivity emphasize either the "know what you want" or "know how to get it" component. But if you don't give appropriate weight to each, no problem: you get to remain deeply involved in the duality of our universe.

by David Allen
from Productive Living ~ David's Food for Thought ~ "There are only two problems in life"
(This article originally appeared in Wired U.K.)

QUOTABLES

"I always wanted to be somebody, but I should have been more specific."

-Lily Tomlin

"You're at your best, when you're focused and you're serious and passionate about what you do, but at the same time you can relax and have fun and be confident."

-Derek Fisher

Saturday, May 7, 2011

Alignment After Action

Normally we think to align or balance self before taking any concrete actions. Early morning meditation/yoga, healthy consumption, music, reading/writing something inspirational, are some examples. More objectively, it is action that brings us to these self-empowering aligning activities in the first place. A combination of initiative, effort and concentration that allows us to break through the occasional difficulties and awkwardness... as with learning to read, write or ride a bike.

This requires a willingness to endure and experience whatever arises, inwardly in the realm of thought and emotion as well as outwardly in facing and figuring out the task at hand. The understanding is that benevolent and divine grace descends the higher realms onto the physical, only when full attention and concentrated intention is given to the present task at hand. First the friction, then fusion, then unlimited bountiful creation. Total absorption, leverage, alignment, and grace in action comes with simply showing up (being there), diving in and persevering to get the job done.

Gradually, overtime, the sense of alignment and flow comes more effortlessly, naturally, as certain muscles and skills are built and developed in an unending evolutionary creative process. There exists prior to action a spontaneously aligned meditative state (Being), a fresh beginners mind that is open receptive aware, accepting and surrendered to the reality of what is. It is this inner calm center that initially provides us the pure potential state necessary for facing the daunting tasks at hand and all that one must master in a single work day, including negative thoughts and difficult emotions. However, it must be remembered that all worldly activity comes naturally and easily only with a great deal of initiative, attention, hard work and practice.

Joel David Zenie