Getting Things Done: The Pomodoro Way
A few days ago I wrote about procrastination and by coincidence I came across an article about changing your working method to embrace the interruptions, instead of trying to find long stretches of concentration (‘the zone’). It is a nice read, however, more importantly in the comment section I came across something that really appealed to me: The Pomodoro Technique. I had seen it before, but it didn’t jump out to me at that time.
The basic idea is: work for 25 minutes on a single task, with a timer ticking back the time left and then take a break. This is augmented by a few other important steps, such as: noting down your distractions, evaluate them only after the 25 minutes are up and crossing of the completed intervals per task.
As I don’t have a proper timer yet, I looked for a software one, that works under Ubuntu as well and came across: Focus Booster. It makes the ticking sound and also very nicely automatically starts your 5 minute break timer after time is up.
I just started using it, so I’ve only done a few of these ‘Pomodoro’ intervals, but I feel very confident that this will actually work as it makes you very aware of the distractions you need to avoid/delay and the time you have available. Starting the timer gives a feel of commitment about doing something NOW instead of in a few minutes. Furthermore, having a timer tick back, give you back a bit of that deadline stress that makes you feel productive, without the disadvantages of real deadlines. And, not unimportant: it feels good to cross of real productive time.
Tags: GTD, Pomodoro, time management
October 20th, 2010 at 3:28 pm
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