Archive for the ‘Simplicity’ Category

You’ve Seen My Desk, Now See My Desktop

Friday, January 11th, 2008

In my recent post — Clear Your Mind, Clear Your Desk
– I posted a photo of my physical desk in all it’s ridiculously tidy glory. Today, purely coincidentally, one of my editors asked me to send a screenshot of my computer desktop. The virtual one, not the physical one. She’s preparing a talk for MacWorld Expo, and she needs an assortment of people’s desktop screenshots. So, I took a screenshot and emailed it to her. When I was looking at the screenshot, I realized my virtual desktop is as absurdly neat as my physical desktop, and for the same reasons. Have a look:

(click for a full size view)

For those of you who are wondering, this uber-neatness doesn’t extend to all aspects of my life. My clothes, for instance, tend to end up in sloppy little mountains here and there in my home. But that’s okay. We all have habits we want to improve. I’ll refactor over time, and all will be well. My point is: I don’t make neatness an obsession, but in places like my workspaces, when I need to be tidy, I can be super tidy. Now… where did I put my socks? ;-)

Clear Your Mind, Clear Your Desk

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

A Clean, GTD-compliant desk

All my adult life, I’ve kept a messy desk. There were always piles of papers spilling over one another, books, pens, and other random clutter. Ever since getting serious about GTD though, I’ve become a “neat desk” person without even meaning to. That is, I didn’t have to try to develop this new habit of keeping a neat, uncluttered desk; it just happened naturally. Take a look at the picture above. That’s a picture of my desk last night. I was walking by it, and ultra-tidiness of it struck me, so I snapped a picture of it. And, actually, the double laptop thing is unusual for me. Ordinarily, I only have three objects on the desk: one laptop, one lamp, and the little Buddha statue at the base of the lamp.

How did GTD lead to this bizarre but welcome neatness, you ask? Well, one of the great things about GTD is you only work on one thing at a time. And when you’re working on that one thing, you’re fully focused on it. That’s a great way to work, and it dovetails nicely with other philosophies about life and productivity I hold, so it works out nicely on several different planes. As Shunryu Suzuki said: “When you do something, you should burn yourself completely, like a good bonfire, leaving no trace of yourself.” Multi-tasking is incompatible with such a goal.

So, while I’m working, instead of having dozens and dozens of things cluttering my desk, I have only the things that concern that one task on my desk. For example, if I’m paying my bills, I extract one bill from my inbox, and place that bill and only that bill on my desk. If I’m working on a programming project and need a reference book, that one book is on my desk. If what I’m working on requires no physical objects other than my laptop, then there’s nothing else on my desk. The side effect? One very neat desk!

Now, I’m not an absolutist about it. Sometimes there’s an extra thing or two on the desk. Right now there’s a pad of paper and an orange I’ll snack on soon. A stray item or two that doesn’t stay long doesn’t bother me. But generally speaking, the desk is in a permanent state of neatness. My desk was just the way you see it in the picture last night. I didn’t hide things to make the picture more dramatic.

The neatness of my desk has had a nice effect on my mind and stress level that I wouldn’t have guessed would happen back in my messy desk days. Since I don’t see a bunch of “to-be-done” things — “open loops” in GTD-speak — right in front of me all the time, my mind isn’t always glomming on to them at the wrong time and creating low-level stress: “Oh, man. There are those unpaid bills. I should pay those, but I can’t right now. I’ll do them later. I wonder if any are past due. Ack.” Nope. I trust my system, so I know that when I sweep my inboxes today, any unpaid bills will get paid immediately (since they’re: a) actionable and b) take less than 2 minutes to do), so they’re safely “out of sight and out of mind.”

As a long-time messy desk person, I’m not saying that a neat desk is the only way to go. I was certainly productive with a messy desk; but I strongly suspect I’m more productive with a neat one. Either way, I thought I’d share the picture and the thoughts it inspired.

What My Storage Unit is Teaching Me About Simplicity

Thursday, November 15th, 2007

A few months ago I moved to a new city a couple of states away. When I moved, I put almost all of my worldly possessions into a big storage unit. To the new city, I took only what would fit in the back seat and trunk of my compact sedan and I shipped a few moving boxes ahead. Other than that, everything remained behind in storage.

Much of that mini-mountain of stuff I’ve been dragging with me from home to home, city to city, each time I moved over the last few decades. It’s quite a bit of stuff!

So now since I’ve moved, I’ve been living with relatively few possessions. (By American standards anyway, and certainly far fewer possessions than I surrounded myself with in my last home.)

The experience has been eye opening.

My day to day life with this minimal subset of possessions is as rich and full as it ever was when I had all my possessions around me. During these months, I’ve discovered I didn’t have with me some thing I needed or wanted only a mere handful of times. So the question arises: If I can go without all that stuff and be as content as when it’s around, then why do I own all that stuff? Are most of those possessions then just unnecessary complications? Are the experiential insights I’m having now keys to further simplifying my life?

Eventually I’ll return to retrieve my belongings. But when I do, I believe this time away from them will make parting with the things I don’t really need or that don’t have special sentimental value easier than it was before. When I was packing them all away into storage, I intended to simplify, and I did manage to part with some things, but still each and every thing that went into storage seemed like something I couldn’t bear to part with. My experience now is teaching me to question this lingering attachment.

One last, unrelated thing: Recently, Walking the Black Dog featured a moving, thought-provoking post called Removing the arrow. In it the author discusses, in an extremely personal way, difficulties and depression that has arisen from family relationships, and he shares his insights and questions as well as discussing the value of asking, a la Albert Ellis, “Why Not?” and the Buddhist parable from which the post’s title is derived. Highly recommended.