Skip to main content

How To Have Ideas | PigPog

Popularity Report

Total Popularity Score: 0

Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...
Loading...

Rank

URL Tag Cloud

Bookmark History

Saved by 1 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2006-09-27


Public Comment

on 2006-09-27 by powmow

Many of the comments on this page really resonated with me. Everything's connected, everything is part of a system, dont block the outputs!

Public Sticky notes

the key to GTD is that you’re creating a flow from your ideas to your outputs

Highlighted by powmow

If anything blocks the flow, stopping your ideas becoming an expression, the ideas will clog up too - you’ll stop having ideas.

Highlighted by powmow

An output. Clear the output, and the inputs will just arrive on their own

Highlighted by powmow

If the output is only going to be on sometimes, but you need the input to stay unblocked, you need a storage tank in the middle

Highlighted by powmow

It doesn’t matter if you don’t really want to do GTD as such. Just make sure you work out how your tank will work, and make sure you can trust it. This is the important part. Your brain has to trust the flow of your system.

Highlighted by powmow

trying to write, make sure you have somewhere to park ideas and bits of potential material. I just use tasks in categories to make lists. I have a category for Article Ideas, and one called Compost. Compost is for little ideas I have, that aren’t articles in themselves, and for snips of stuff I’ve read elsewhere and found interesting - I turn them over every so often and hope they’ll compost down into something fertile. Once I start writing an article, it goes into a different list again for active articles, and I can raid the Compost for material. When I want to work on something, there’s a list right there. When I find an interesting article somewhere else, there’s somewhere to store it, and I know I’ll come across it later

Highlighted by powmow

If you draw, a sketchbook might do the job, but make sure you have some plan in place for how it will be processed. You have to go through it and find the good stuff, otherwise it’s not a tank, its just a drain

Highlighted by powmow

For photographers, your tank can be a folder to keep your photos in and a copy of Picasa. The important part is knowing that you’ll go through them and do something with them

Highlighted by powmow

It’s all about creative flow - block that flow anywhere along its route, and the input will get blocked too

Highlighted by powmow

Readers (1)