- Figure out how you can make each task as fun as possible.
- Break the task down into little bites and feel good when you get a bite done.
- Don't be perfectionistic. That way, tasks will be less painful to do.
- Do a crappy first version. It's easier to revise your way into excellence than to come up with it out of thin air.
- When you reach a hard part, don't struggle long with it. Usually, if you can't make progress within 15-60 seconds, chances are you won't make enough progress to justify taking any more time on it. Go on, maybe come back to it later, or get help with it.
- Feel grateful for your situation. Instead of resenting having to work, adopt the approach so common among the World War II generation: Accept that you have to work, no questions asked: You have an almost a spiritual obligation to not be a parasite on the world, and more positively, to use your abilities and training to make the world better, even if it's just to dig a drainage ditch.
Tuesday, July 22, 2008
Getting Motivated
Here's a list of ideas that I derived from one of today's career counseling sessions. I've written about most of these ideas before, but feel it might be useful for you if I list them here:
Excellent points, all. Thanks.
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