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 Some of them are outdated or I'm no longer interested.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?
2 comments:
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!
I may have stumbled upon an app to deal with some of this.
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