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List Making

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Honestly, I don’t know how people get things done without a list. It’s not just a tool for remembering what to buy at the grocery store–lists help me keep my priorities straight on any given day.

Am I compulsive about writing lists? Not exactly. However, it’s probably a telling sign that today’s list of activities included making another list. And this is the truth: I was not always this hyper-organized. Like most things, I learned the hard way.

I was working at NASA, supporting the Ares Program Manager and I completely dropped the ball because I didn’t have one of the manager’s requests because I didn’t have a comprehensive list of my pending deliverables. After I’d turned a darker shade of pink, I went back to my desk, where my supervisor informed me that I needed to develop and use a consistent, workable work tracking system or one would be imposed on me. Given those choices, I created my own.

Keeping myself organized in this manner is a survival mechanism for working, but eventually it can become a useful habit–even to the point of helping you plan your coming year, as I’m doing this week. While some people dread “to-do” lists (I had a high school teacher who had a “Do It!” list), here are some advantages to it:

Somewhere in my draft folder, I even had a list of upcoming topics that I wanted to write about until I burned through them all. Guess it’s time to write another one. 🙂

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