What Is On My Inbox To-do Lists
I used my inbox as a to-do list/memory catch-all for anything I wanted to attend to sometime in the future. So I was always e-mailing myself notes and links from my iPhone and iPad. Recently my personal mailbox had mail from my phone or iPad to my laptop on such things as:
- Notes or links about items I want to buy for myself or anyone in the family.
- Links to articles and books I want to read that don't necessarily relate to work.
- Links to sewing instructions that I have actually used and don't want to lose, because I know I'll want them again.
- Links to recipes I want to try.
Also:
- E-mails from every place I've ordered from, planning to delete them after the order arrived.
- Marketing e-mails from every bookstore I ordered from during the pandemic. (I did unsubscribe from other places.)
- E-mails from family and friends that I want to remember to respond to.
- E-mails from medical groups asking me to rate my experience with them.
- E-mails from my political representatives on many levels.
In my work inbox you might find e-mails mostly from me about:
- Ideas for my writers' journal.
- Changes I want to make on whatever I'm working on at the time.
- Books I want to look for.
- Articles I want to read.
- Authors whose work I want to look for.
- Agents I want to look for information on.
- Publications I want to research as possible markets for my work.
When Do You Deal With These To-Do Items, Gail?
Well, ah, hard to say. These last four years, in particular, I've been packing those inboxes with to-dos while I struggled to get through the first draft of a book I've mentioned here before. Cleaning the inboxes was the plan for the first week post-draft.
I've been doing just that--for three weeks. And I'm not done.
It just goes on and on. And I'm continuing to mail myself to-dos.
One benefit of having a few years of to-do items in the inbox is that I can't remember why I put some of them there. So those can be deleted. Some of them are outdated or I'm no longer interested. So those are deleted, too. You could say, arguably, that I saved myself time by not addressing them early when I could remember what I wanted to do with them and was still interested.
Still, this is a lot of stuff. I am sort of enjoying going through and addressing some of these things, at least. And I have no idea how to handle email to-dos differently. Maybe this is the way to go...get to them when you can and at that point toss what no longer works for you.
That sounds like a time management technique, doesn't it?
Oh, that's a lot of things! I use my school e mail as a to do list of sorts, but only through e mails others send to me that I don't delete until they are dealt with. I use quarter sheets of school scrap paper for my to do lists, especially at home. (At school, it's a successful day if I even manage to MAKE a list between putting out fires!) If I have to keep moving an item to a new list every day, I'm more likely to deal with it than to keep putting it off. I guess in the end, it doesn't matter what the system is as long as something gets done!
ReplyDeleteI may have stumbled upon an app to deal with some of this.
ReplyDelete