Following advice by David Allen in Getting Things Done, Stephen Wolfram, and the DSM-5, some individuals may be diagnosed with an episodic need to hibernate, making the A.D.H.D. framework
a viable candidate for integration in therapeutic intervention.
Do you suffer from projects that linger on or were completely neglected?
Add Hibernation to your medicine cabinet.
Hibernation will store and document any (partial) work related to the project, in a methodical and disciplined manner, allowing you to reawaken the project in the future, while diminishing the (inevitable, when hibernating and reawakening work) loss of resource tissue.
Hibernation will allow you to focus better, while having the peace of mind that the resources invested and (say) conclusions reached may be utilized, at least in part, "someday-maybe" (in GTD terminology) in the future.
Consult yourself if Hibernation is right for you.
Side effects may include: procrastination, lack of focus, and, in rare cases, hyperdocumentation.
Disclaimer: Indeed. "If you're wrong, you can always add the items back.". Wanted to emphasize this part of the workflow, and make it more explicit, but mostly, could not resist the ADD/ADHD angle.
This is great and on a side note - I found ‘The 13 Attributes’ via a Bard query...
Following advice by David Allen in Getting Things Done, Stephen Wolfram, and the DSM-5, some individuals may be diagnosed with an episodic need to hibernate, making the A.D.H.D. framework
a viable candidate for integration in therapeutic intervention.
Do you suffer from projects that linger on or were completely neglected?
Add Hibernation to your medicine cabinet.
Hibernation will store and document any (partial) work related to the project, in a methodical and disciplined manner, allowing you to reawaken the project in the future, while diminishing the (inevitable, when hibernating and reawakening work) loss of resource tissue.
Hibernation will allow you to focus better, while having the peace of mind that the resources invested and (say) conclusions reached may be utilized, at least in part, "someday-maybe" (in GTD terminology) in the future.
Consult yourself if Hibernation is right for you.
Side effects may include: procrastination, lack of focus, and, in rare cases, hyperdocumentation.
Disclaimer: Indeed. "If you're wrong, you can always add the items back.". Wanted to emphasize this part of the workflow, and make it more explicit, but mostly, could not resist the ADD/ADHD angle.