the war of art / gtd the war of art / gtd

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Resistance can be thought of as anything that pulls us away from doing the work we know is most important to us. It takes many forms (including procrastination, fear, distraction, and negative self-talk), but the effect is often similar: we find or permit all kinds of barriers to keep us from becoming the person we want to be, or from completing the thing we really want to make. Whether that’s being a published author, a composer, a playwright, or a painter, our impulse to create constantly battles an impulse to do something else, or to do nothing — to not upset our weirdly comfy stasis.

The War of Art, and JoCo on becoming a “true person”

[…] it’s really important to underscore that beating resistance does not have to mean quitting your job or doing something equally dramatic; it just means that you identify and then choose to beat the crap out of whatever perceived obstacle keeps you from doing your work. […]

if you’re interested in gtd in general; good starting points are wikipedia’s gtd#organize and 43signals’ introduction.

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„when in doubt, do it „when in doubt, do it“
you have no chance to survive. make your time. you have no chance to survive. make your time.