Showing posts with label pomodoro. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pomodoro. Show all posts

Monday, 26 February 2024

Beyond the Clock: My Evolution from 4-Hour Dependency

When I first started this blog, I knew that I wanted it to focus on small steps - for healthy living, for the environment, for anything really. And several years into this, I am reminded daily that no great thing gets done without these small steps. Everything is made up of small steps.

The thing is... we don't see some of those small steps. We see a singer blaze into stardom and forget that this singer spent hours, days, months, years, practicing their craft, one small step at a time. We see new buildings pop up in our neighbourhood. We don't see the myriad small steps that go into constructing the building. We hear of a friend of a friend retiring at age 40 with millions in the bank. We are jealous and wonder what they did to hit the jackpot? Win the lottery? Sell a start-up? We don't believe it can be done one frugal penny-pinching step at a time.

And we know this... deep down, we know this... but still... we think that we there might be a shortcut to fame or fortune.

How Much Time is "Enough" Time?

A friend of my is producing two books a year (more or less). These are not fiction books, but heavily researched non-fiction espionage books. I don't know how he does it! He must have oodles and oodles of time! Like, open vistas of whole days that are just devoted to writing. Right? Maybe. Maybe not. Perhaps he just has a different view of time.

I still think that I need several blissfully empty hours in front of me before I can work on the next book, or start a new project. I don't believe that I can write a book one small step at a time. I think 30 minutes is too short. I think the smallest step I need is 2 hours. Maybe more. Like 4 hours!

Perhaps that is the key. I have an image in my mind of the size/length/duration of the "smallest step". For writing... realistically... I think I need 2 hours... and ideally 4 hours. I mean, I "need" that time to get back into it... to pick up where I left off... to gather my research notes and recall where I was in the project. And maybe I do need an hour to do that... but if I were to work on the project every day... I wouldn't need so much time to "get back in the groove".

When it comes to yard maintenance... it's the same... I think I need a good hour to get anything useful done. I mean, there is soooo much to do out there... I believe that I need at least an hour to make a meaningful dent in things. Or do I? My partner and I went out there this past spring, on a sunny afternoon, and decided to spend 15 minutes decluttering the shed. We made a sizable dent in the chaos in the shed. Just 15 minutes.

Same with house cleaning... my default seems to be an hour. Even though I know, from experience, that I can get a tonne of cleaning done in 15 minutes. My brain seems to have a default setting of one hour.

So if there is less than an hour of time in my day... I fill it with smaller, less important tasks that I know I can complete, rather than working on a larger project which I know will not be complete... even though it is moved further along to completion.

I know that completing a task gives a dopamine hit... so maybe I'm just a dopamine addict... wanting the hit after completing a task. If I know that a task can't be completed in 15 minutes or an hour... there is no dopamine carrot dangling ahead of me. And so I default to easier, simpler, shorter tasks.

The question then becomes... can I alter that 1 hour default? I did use the Pomodoro technique successfully a few times for projects that were seriously stuck. Work for just 25 minutes and then take a 5 minute break. It seems awfully rigid though. Or could I create an artificial dopamine carrot for working on something for 15-30 minutes?  And what would that look like?

Peak Alertness

Or... perhaps my sense that an hour is required in order for me to do productive project work isn't actually that far off. Studies have shown that our ultradian rhythm (cycles repeated multiple times in a 24 hour period) might have a role to play. Based on studies of our natural energy and alertness cycle... we can maintain peak alertness for 90 to 120 minutes before we need a break. On top of that... studies have also shown that it takes about 23 minutes to get into a deep work zone.

Sooo... if I really want to do some deep work... then the Pomodoro technique isn't going to work. I legitimately need about 30 minutes to get into a work zone. And I can maintain that for up to 2 hours. So the sweet spot for working on a complex project (like writing a blog or working on another book) is going to be somewhere in the 60-120 minute zone.

This actually makes me feel a bit better. I'm not mucked up! My sense that I can't get anything useful done on a blog or a book in less than an hour is probably not that far off. I need to be able to work on it for at least 30 minutes to get into a flow zone... but can only maintain that for another hour or so.

30 Minutes is Enough?

But here's where I can marry these two bits of information. All I really need is a 30 minute chunk of time. That's a small enough segment that it doesn't feel impossible or overwhelming. I also know that once I've been working on something for 30 minutes... odds are I will continue for a bit longer. And yes, ideally I would have a one hour chunk to devote to my writing.

On the other hand... for other things... like decluttering the garden shed, or updating our finances... I can drop that down to 15 minutes. I can get a lot of decluttering done in 15 minutes.

Now... the trick is... to actually follow through on this. An hour seems like a fairly large step to me... although 30 minutes is a bit more doable... cuts that hour in half. But even those 30 minutes are broken up into countless small steps... the first one being... to just start! Getting started seems to be 80% of the battle. If I can just get started, I know that everything else falls into place.

Next Small Step

So much of my to-do list is made up of things like "write blog about ____". That isn't, actually, a small step. That's like saying "land a man on the moon". Well... let's just give up right now because that is a huge mountain of a task! It's no wonder I get stuck and just skip over that item in my to-do list... it's much more doable to "screw fire extinguisher to the wall"... a very concrete, small step task. And it gives me a quick dopamine hit. Whereas "write blog" is so amorphous and nebulous that my dopamine addict looks at it and goes... "nope... too hard... I need a quick fix". And so I spend my time completing small tasks rather than focusing my precious time on larger, complex tasks.

Sigh... I'm back to looking at my productivity system! Surely there is something out there... something better than what I am doing. Something that will actually help me focus and get things done?

Productivity Systems

What about the Getting Things Done (GTD) system... where you identify the next actionable step? "Write blog" is not an actionable step. Even "research blog" is not an actionable step. Maybe "open blogger web app"... "open current blog post"... "review material written to-date"... "identify next steps"... Those are small steps. But do I really want to spend time adding them to my to-do list? Not really. I think I should be able to identify these when I see "write blog post"... but clearly that is NOT working!

There's also time-blocking... where you look at the week ahead and map things out ahead of time. What appointments do I have? What are the self-care things that need to go in there - walk, eating, etc. What work time do I need to factor into the schedule. Then... look at the remaining time and figure out... what can I do in that block of time... write a blog? answer emails and make phone calls? research Airbnb tips and tricks? The idea with time-blocking is that you group things together. So I am not answering emails and making phone calls throughout the day, when I should really be working on a blog or something else. I have tried it in the past and found it far too rigid... but perhaps I wasn't using it correctly because it is supposed to flex and flow with the unexpected.

I've also come across another idea... about working on one thing... without distraction. So the question to ask is... "Did I do what I said I'm going to do for as long as I said I would, without distraction?". Even if I didn't finish it... I can still get a dopamine hit because I did what I said I would do... without getting distracted. That's a win!

I'm going to have to let all of these percolate for a while... and see what I can come up with that might actually work for me

Image by Steve Buissinne from Pixabay

Sunday, 5 March 2023

30 Minutes Wins the Race

Thirty minutes. Half an hour. It's not a lot of time, really.

I mean... let me rephrase that...

I don't think it's a lot of time. Sometimes... but not all the time.

30 Minutes = Eternity or a Flash?

When I am waiting for someone to get ready to head out the door... then 30 minutes is an eternity!!! Like nails down a chalkboard... for 30 lonnnnggggg minutes!

But when I'm sitting down to work on a project... then 30 minutes isn't enough time to do anything of significance, at least to my mind. So I might as well not even get started. Because I only have 30 minutes you know.

See the disconnect? Sometimes 30 minutes feels like a HUGE amount of time... and sometimes it feels like nothing at all. It's the same 30 minutes... it's just my attitude towards it that is different. I know this about myself. I am well aware of it. Yet, I seem unable to do anything to address it.

Well, that's not true... sometimes now... if we are heading out the door for 11 am (ish)... then I know that I can usually just keep working away on something, or tidying up or... whatever... until I get the call that "I'm just about ready!". It might be 11:02 or 11:08 or 11:15 am... but at least I'm not standing by the door fuming.

Soooo... I'm slowly learning that I can use those snippets of time productively. And I'm always totally amazed at how much I can get done in a short amount of time.

30 Minute Walks = Long Distances

The other thing I'm learning is that... you can walk quite a ways in 30 minutes! As I trudge along the virtual Camino... I am tracking my walks with my fitness app. So 20 minutes there... 30 minutes there... 40 minutes there... 18 minutes there. All of those little walks add up surprisingly quickly. Yesterday, I did 3 little walks (21, 20 and 28 minutes) which added up to 5 km in total... or about 10,000 steps.

Perhaps it's because there is a "reward" at the end of this "walk"? A shiny medal? I do tend to be motivated by little things like badges and challenges and medals and stickers and a progress tracker. Is that what this is about?

Stuck Project

Because I really would like to take this insight into walking and translate it into getting some "stuck" projects moving on my to-do list.

There's one project that's been stymieing me since June of 2022. A research buddy (I've never met him) from Poland wrote a short bio of a person of interest to me. This person used to be friends with my father back in Berlin, when they were both boys.

The Polish researcher would like the bio translated into English. He ran the document through Google Translate and asked me to go over the English translation and adjust it so that it reads well. Because while Google Translate is amazing... it's got a few quirks that lead to some odd passages.

There are 12 chapters in this bio, about 70 pages in total. I have done Chapters 1 to 6 and have been stuck on Chapter 7 for months now. There are only 27 pages left in the Word documents and... I am just stuck.

Now, it's not an easy job either, but it's not thaaaatttt hard. I just keep avoiding it. I open the document in Word and say "Today is the day..." and then get distracted by other things. I'll come back to it "later"... "tomorrow"... "next week"... and here we are... still not done!

But... Chapter 7 is "only" 4.5 pages in Word. That is nothing. I know that if I just get started... I will be back into it and could easily get the rest of the document done in a week. I just need to get started.

I don't have to work on it for an hour or two hours. I don't NEED an hour or two hours. All I need is 30 minutes. Just 30 minutes. Surely I can work on it for 30 minutes?? You would think. I'd much rather research productivity techniques for hours than actually get this project completed!

The Pomodoro Technique

And... we're back to the tomato (pomodoro in Italian)... as in the cute tomato timer pictured above. It's a simple technique. Set the timer for 25 minutes... work like a fiend... and then take a 5 minute break. Rinse and repeat for 4 sessions and then take a longer break. Simple. And I've never done it. Oh, I've known about it for years but somehow... it just never grabbed me.

But maybe now is the time to try it. Just set a timer... and work on this damn document for 25 minutes! "Later"... "this afternoon"... "tomorrow"... Nope. Right now. Wish me luck.

***opens document***

OFFS... (Oh for F**ks Sake!!) I have marginal comments already done for the Chapters 7-10 document. I forgot about that. It was my first sweep of the document. I'm farther along than I thought... Sigh.

***sets timer***

And... three Pomodoro timers later... or 1.5 hours later, I have finished Chapters 7 to 10. The end is in sight. Only 10 more pages to go.

I have to admit, I did lose track of the Pomodoro timer and ended up working through the 5 minute breaks... ah well... It did work in terms of getting me started! Just a small step... that added up to a significant amount of time. Same as in walking... a few short walks... adds up to a good distance!