| bio | website | soldoutactivist.com |
|---|---|---|
| location | Dunkirk, IN | |
| age | 31 | |
| visits | member for | 1 year, 9 months |
| seen | Sep 7 '11 at 14:58 | |
| stats | profile views | 1 |
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Sep 2 |
awarded | Supporter |
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Sep 2 |
comment |
How to overcome lazyness and procastination? +1 GTD. Also my 2 cents: manage your expectations and goals, short or long. If you don't know exactly what you want to achieve, you have cut yourself off at the knees from the onset. |
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Sep 2 |
comment |
What are some way to increase productivity with a sleeping disorder? I know how long my cycle is: 26.1 hours (+/-20 minutes), determined across three sleep studies over the last decade. |
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Sep 2 |
awarded | Student |
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Sep 2 |
comment |
What are some way to increase productivity with a sleeping disorder? Good suggestions. I tried the first suggestion for awhile, but calendars with auto-timezone translation mucked it up when other people read the events. As for the other suggestion, the GTD method handles most things that don't have a specific time. They become actions and I have a specific program handling those. More and more, it seems like I'm going to have to go back and tell them it won't work, good try, deal. |
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Sep 2 |
comment |
What are some way to increase productivity with a sleeping disorder? Anything after 5PM UTC 0 is considered the next day for my team. So if I wake up after that time, whatever work I do is slotted for the next day. |
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Sep 2 |
comment |
What are some way to increase productivity with a sleeping disorder? I use GTD for everything non-time-specific, but it and any standard implementation of the calendar is useless in a free-running cycle where one effectively loses time on a daily basis. I have an alarm clock, but it is generally useless. I'm simply do not and can not get tired in the same timeframe you and most the world do in a 24 hour period. My day is closer to 26 hours. This is not a matter of laziness. I'm trying to accomplish a block-schedule that other people can follow: I did a 5-hour block of this here, 1 hour lunch, 4 hours there, etc. And I would still get typical alerts from events. |
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Sep 2 |
comment |
What are some way to increase productivity with a sleeping disorder? Because as my career grows, I have garnered increased responsibilities that aren't as quite as free-running as my sleep patterns and I need to explicitly set timeframes to certain recurring tasks that are flexible enough that shifting them say a couple hours won't ruin the project. Basically, other people are going by my schedule now. I can't help that I have a sleeping disorder that doesn't have many effective defenses that won't degrade my performance. But I'm looking for solution that will assist in the process of time-shifting an existing schedule by whenever I wake up. |
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Sep 1 |
comment |
What are some way to increase productivity with a sleeping disorder? A simple example: you wake and eat breakfast at 7am, start work at 9am. And that's how it's written in your calendar. But I will wake up at 7am one day, 7:30 the next, and 8 the day after. So my pre-defined schedule is shot when I don't wake up at 7. Meaning I have to re-arrange my schedule to reflect the new start of my day. And if I wake at 2 or 10pm, all alerts prior to that are useless. They aren't at the wrong time in a time-sense, but in an effective-use sense. |
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Sep 1 |
asked | What are some way to increase productivity with a sleeping disorder? |
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Aug 19 |
awarded | Autobiographer |