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I once had a drum teacher (Afro-Cuban style, using drums like the djembe and ashiko) who, along with being a great player and drum
builder, prided himself on his memory. I remember a time when he criticized people for writing down things like phone numbers, with the implication being people were lazy if they didn't work to memorize things like that. I felt bad about it for a while (I wasn't practicing
GTD at the time, but I did have an address book), then forgot it.
However, he recently came to mind after reading the following passage from Kerry Gleeson's book
The Personal Efficiency Program: How to Get Organized to Do More Work in Less Time [1]: Under
Forget Remembering he says:
Most people I speak with take a certain degree of pride in their ability to remember "everything" that needs to be done. It is a mental game they play. While that may have been okay at one time, the pace of today's work and home life has accelerated and the volume of activities we could or should keep up with has grown so much that it is impractical to expect to keep on top of 1,000 things to do. No doubt you do remember these things to do, but it may not be at the time it's most convenient or effective, such as three o'clock in the morning, when you sit up in bed and think, "Oh, I have to take care of ..." This constant thinking about, planning out, tracking everything you need to do - remembering everything you need to follow up on - simply overwhelms people.
He goes on to say
What people need is the right system in place, to allow them to remember this myriad of details when, and only when, it's necessary for them to remember.
...which will make any GTD-er feel
warm and fuzzy. Why? Because one of David Allen's central insights is that our minds work best when unfettered by daily minutiae like phone numbers, things to do, checklists, etc. "Write it down" is a classic time management concept, and Allen has taken it further by observing that getting it all out of our heads frees up tremendously our natural creative potential. I've experienced it
[2], as have my clients, and apparently many other practitioners.
I researched the idea a bit further and came across some great related quotes attributed to Albert Einstein
[3],
[4]. From
How to Gain (or Lose) 30 IQ Points - Instantly! [5]:
Einstein himself was fond of saying that his pencil was smarter than he was.
I also loved this passage from
Time Management for System Administrators (sample chapter
here):
In Chapter 1, I mentioned the story about Albert Einstein trying to reserve as much of his brain as possible for physics by eliminating other brainwork, like deciding what to wear each day. Legend also has it that Einstein didn't memorize addresses or phone numbers, even his own. The important ones were written on a slip of paper in his wallet so as not to use up precious brain capacity. When someone would ask him for his own phone number he would tell them that it’s in the phone book and politely ask them to look it up. Be like Einstein; reserve your brain for system administration.
A final piece of evidence comes from the field of memorization tricks, such as
The Memory Book and (ironically)
The Einstein Memory Trainer. If it takes methods like these to get our minds to reliably store and recall such bits of information, isn't that evidence that they're not
meant to be used in this way? This is the essence of why such tricks
are so impressive.
To wrap up, consider the post
GTD means never forgetting by user flexiblefine:
My biggest general success with GTD is adopting the collection habit. Collecting things as they come to me means not having to worry about remembering anything until "later" when I can do something about it.
So give yourself a break, forget (smartly) some things, and let your brain do what it's great at.
More Einstein QuotesOK, the man was not just brilliant, but wise
and had a sense of humor. Here are a few more
quotes I really liked:
- Any man who can drive safely while kissing a pretty girl is simply not giving the kiss the attention it deserves.
- He who can no longer pause to wonder and stand rapt in awe, is as good as dead; his eyes are closed.
- I do not know with what weapons World War 3 will be fought, but World War 4 will be fought with sticks and stones.
- I have no special talent. I am only passionately curious.
- The important thing is not to stop questioning.
References- [1] From the second edition. Note: I found a lot of useful ideas in his book, with much GTD overlap (though there are points of conflict). More at Institute for Business Technology (via their international listing).
- [2] In my thank you email to Allen I mentioned some of the big changes his book enabled in my life, including loosing 15 pounds, curing my insomnia, making great strides in a back problem I've had all my life, and switching careers after 20 years. Pretty neat!
- [3] I couldn't find any authoritative versions online, unfortunately. I'd love to know some sources if you have any.
- [4] Interestingly, my neighbor has apparently met him - see My Half Hour with Einstein.
- [5] From the same article: "Einstein himself was fond of saying that his pencil was smarter than he was."