Home » Organize-Your-Life 101 » Know When To Unplug from the Net

Know When To Unplug from the Net

[24 July 2009 | 0 Comments | ]
Posted by Eric Santillan

from pandemicstudios.com

from pan​demic​stu​dios​.com

The prob­lem with the net is that there’s so much to do in it that you’ve already spent sev­eral hours with­out notic­ing it. The inter­net is a black hole that can just suck you in. I’ve recently acquired a high speed broad­band in my unit and the first few days of hav­ing inter­net, I got totally sucked in. I was sleep­ing late, was a slave of the net and was doing inces­sant and dig­i­tal fid­dling, a term I got from Write to Done.

The orig­i­nal arti­cle is here.

I’ve recently had a very trou­ble­some real­iza­tion about my line of work. I’m the man­ag­ing edi­tor for a few web­sites and a con­tribut­ing edi­tor for a few oth­ers. Web­sites hap­pen to be on the Inter­net; a job that revolves around web­sites tends to require that you use the Internet.

The trou­ble­some part is that the Inter­net can make it very hard to get work done. Child labor laws aside, it’s sort of like ask­ing a six year old to work in a toy store. Don’t expect them to be doing much in the way of cus­tomer ser­vice or cashier work.

Once upon a time I used to enjoy the Inter­net in my spare time, but these days — due to the fact that the Inter­net is my place of work — you can’t get me off of it quickly enough at the end of the work­day. That doesn’t mean I’m any less prone to dis­trac­tion while I’m on it, though. It requires a fair bit of dis­ci­pline to stay on task, and we all know that the longer you’re required to exer­cise dis­ci­pline, the more likely it is to fail.

So my solu­tion has been to accept that I’ll spend a con­sid­er­able amount of my work­ing time online and exer­cise dis­ci­pline when I am, but reduce the amount of con­nected time as much as I can. There are plenty of tasks that can be com­pleted with­out con­nec­tiv­ity even in a job like mine — the added bonus is fewer inter­rup­tions by instant mes­sen­ger or email that you’re com­pelled to check right away.

Con­texts

The con­cept of “con­texts” as used in pro­duc­tiv­ity is the thing that’ll allow us to sep­a­rate tasks that require the Inter­net from those that do not. Any­thing that does not require the Inter­net, is best done with­out it.

Basi­cally you con­tinue to man­age tasks the way you’ve always done (unless you haven’t been man­ag­ing tasks prop­erly, in which case you should read a book like Get­ting Things Done and start doing so), but start apply­ing a tag to each task you enter — either online or offline. You then use the soft­ware you’re using to view only tasks from one group or the other depend­ing on which list you’re tack­ling at a time, or if you’re not using soft­ware, sim­ply make up two lists.

This approach is based on the prin­ci­ple: if the task doesn’t need to be done with the help of the Inter­net, it’s best done away from it.

Research and Fact-checking

A com­mon crit­i­cism of this approach is that you might come across some­thing you need to fact-check or research. The fact of the mat­ter is there’s too much oppor­tu­nity to end up explor­ing a rab­bit hole when you’re check­ing a fact, and you should rel­e­gate it for later. You can keep a to-research task list that you check when you go online, or if you’re writ­ing you can take a hint from Cory Doc­torow and leave an eas­ily search­able marker, using Find to go through the sec­tions that need check­ing later. You might type, “The cliff was TK feet tall,” and when you search for TK in your doc­u­ment you’ll see it and can find the infor­ma­tion you needed. There’s no need to for­get, and no need to resort to using the Inter­net dur­ing offline time.

Start the Day Offline

An impor­tant tip: start the day with your offline list. Do not start the day with your online list, ever, if you can help it.

For the same rea­son you don’t check facts while writ­ing (that is, the risk of rabbit-holing), you want to delay going online as much as pos­si­ble or you just might not get to those other offline items on your task list. If you tackle offline tasks first, even if you do get dis­tracted when you go online, at least you man­aged to get a con­sid­er­able amount of work done first.

Put Email Last

I tend to think that email is a big dis­trac­tion and it should be dealt with as late in the day as pos­si­ble. If there’s no rea­son to reply to some­thing, archive or delete it (while often devoid of use­ful, work-related con­tent, email from friends and fam­i­lies doesn’t qual­ify for this sort of treat­ment — this is a way to be effec­tive at work only). If you can’t man­age stay­ing away from email until four in the after­noon or your boss sim­ply won’t let you, put it off until just after lunch. Your boss will even­tu­ally notice the pro­duc­tiv­ity gains you made in the first few hours of the day.

Every Fri­day is Organize-Your-Life 101 Day at AngPere​grino​.Com.
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