Transgressions: 1
Effectiveness: Advancing
Days Since a Collapse: 4
Advances:
1. Made $72.
2. Got 1/2 hour of intense exercise, plus moderate exercise dispersed throughout my workday. 
3. Wrote 2 pages, began to edit earlier pages, and spent time thinking about stylistic issues that should impact the entire work. 
My new job is glorious.  Today I managed inventory and prepared orders.  My co-workers are awesome (I think everyone has at least a college degree; regardless, they're all interesting, helpful, and pleasant).  Tomorrow I'm going to start deliveries.  We're allowed to have any coffee drinks from the cafe anytime we want.  I got a cappucino and it was awesome.  The product is definitely quality.  I was pleased to fill an order for an espresso bar on Walnut Street in Philly. 
Observation: My time is better spent when I truly immerse myself in an activity.  I've been doing this well, and correcting myself when I slip.  I'm just realizing how important it is.  I've experimented with psychological posturing to help me with this.  One thing I did was to pretend that I would do everything for a long time, even if I was only doing it for half an hour.  Maybe that's not clear--if I'm constantly thinking about what I need to do next, and I'm trying to push the activity toward it's endpoint, I don't do as well.  If I allow myself to shift gears, settle in, and pretend that I'll be doing it for an indefinite period, so that I don't worry about the endpoint, and I just take it one step at a time, I seem to get more out of it.  Even though that's how I think about it, I still adhere to a schedule.  Ironically, although maybe understandably, things go faster, or the endpoint actually is reached sooner, with the method that I'm describing.
Monday, January 30, 2006
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 Posts
Posts
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment