The timesuck buster

Suck up!

Yesterday was another one of those days, having great plans for the day and all kinds of things to do. In short, a productive day.

And then the day actually is there, getting up late, procrastinating through lunchtime. Surfing a bit, managing to do one of the many things on my list (formatting and reinstalling my laptop) and eventually going for a long session of in-line skating (20 km or so).  A productive day you might think, but nowhere near the amount of productivity I had planned.

The biggest problem was I had all sorts of things I had on my list that I told myself I “must” do. The only two things not on that list were reinstalling my laptop (I wanted to, it wasn’t a must) and going in-line skating (again, I wanted to do that).  This blogpost got form in my head during those kilometers.

The common factor between the things I wanted to do was that I wanted to do them and it wasn’t a must. The common factor between all those other things were the label “must do this”. Reinstalling the laptop took the better part of an hour, in line skating roughly an hour and a half. So that leaves a lot of time in the day. What happened?! Where the *bleep* did all my time go…. what are the timesucks?

ToDo vs. Contentment

Timesucking is a major issue with everyone trying to be productive. However, before we explore those there are two camps in productivity:

In the blue corner we have those who want to do as much as possible in a day, keeping to-do lists and trying all kinds of lifehacks to squeeze more productivity out of everything.

In the red corner we have those who tell us that we must select that one thing that will make us feel content “if this is the only thing we do today” and tell us to drop the to-do lists.

I’ll leave it to you who you put your money on. However, both camps have the same problem: Tempus Fugit

Timesucks are all around us, to you, my appreciated reader, even this blog is one. To me, checking this blogs statistics is one. If this blog wasn’t useful to me in some way this blog would be a total timesuck as well.

But of course there are more out there

  • TV Did watching TV ever get you to make some progress in life? In areas that really matter?
  • Plugged Gaming Your fragging skills might get better, but did playing games teach you a valuable life lesson, get something done? If all you could do today was play a game on your PC or console, would you be happy with your accomplishment?
  • Unplugged gaming I’ve spent a lot of my time in highschool playing “Magic, the Gathering” and I still have thousands of cads (and 11 decks I play with every now and then) A total timesuck. It didn’t get me a lasting social network, it costs loads of money and if I spent all that time practicing guitar I’d be the next Steve Vai, that’s how much time got sucked. Gaming isn’t good for much other than useless skills. The only exception is that I learned to barter and haggle which might be useful in traveling to countries where these skills are part of daily life.
  • TV It’s a huge timesuck. As a random statistic: it turns out that the average kid nowadays spends at least 3 hours a day in front of the cathode ray gun getting zapped.
  • Social media It’s been said before, how much time do you spend on twitter/facebook/myspace and whatnot. Is it all useful? Or are you just doing pointless things. Did you know you can schedule your twitters? This means you can scheduled notifications about your blogposts so you no longer have to log in to twitter to tel everyone and running the risk of getting timesucked.
  • TV I’m sure I mentioned this one before but it’s huge.
  • Cleaning This is my personal favorite when it comes to procrastination. My room is at it’s cleanest during exam weeks. I end up cleaning the inside of my pc and sorting the magic cards I mentioned earlier before I commit to doing what I need to be doing. Ow… my bookcase is a mess, I’ll be right back…

…I think you get the idea by now.

I’m going to give you two homework assignments. You can do them if you want, it’s not a must. Afer all, making something a must will most certainly put it on the bottom of your list.

  1. Unplug your TV for a week.
  2. Identify the timesucks in your life and bust them!

I’d love to hear about the timesucks you identified and how you busted them. Please do tell us all about it. Thanks

  1. Alan says:

    I love your use of the word “fragging.” Oh how I miss those days.

  2. zenkrak says:

    Sometime life itself is the timesuck.

    I didn’t watch TV for about two years but now I’ve gotten sucked into a few shows, which is not so bad. It is the sitting down before hand and watching the random dreck afterward that sucks my time so bad.

    Online surfing around is probably my biggest timesuck. I am even on vacation right now and on the computer!

  3. Carl says:

    If I had all the hours back I spent on gaming in a variety of forms, tv when I was in High School, I could become an expert in probably two or three fields if I followed the 10,000 hours principle.

    1) Already busted. Haven’t owned a tv in years.

    2) In progress. Thanks Christaan.

  4. Christiaan says:

    1) I’d love to see you haul a TV along in your new pack *evil grin*. That would be a sight to behold.

    2) Most welcome, *hums ghostbusters theme*

  5. John Bardos says:

    I am in the “red corner” of productivity. I make a rough list of things I want to do, but I try to just focus on one or two things a day.

    I think there is a danger with all this productivity focus. People seem to spend more time on the systems, tools and planning than they do on the actual work.

    Just getting away from everything and clearing your brain often results in more productivity when you return, like your in-line skating example proved.

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