Cheating At Solitare
The other night, I had a plan. A good plan. A productive plan. After my AA meeting, I was going to go downtown, fire up the laptop, finish a blog post I've been working on, tweak a few things on my laptop, set up some FTP access for a friend, and maybe catch some baseball on TV. But I did none of that. Instead, I had a cigar and enjoyed the baseball game with the other patrons. And in doing so, I came to a realization that had been gnawing at me for a while.
You need to turn 'off' the multi-tasking and networking from time to time.
Smoking cigars is something I do to relax and unwind. It's somewhat of a carryover from the 15 years I smoked cigarettes (yes, I started smoking at age 10), some of it is tied to my father's own cigar smoking, but mostly it's a reason to sit down and decompress. Given that it takes a good 45 minutes to an hour to smoke a cigar, it's almost as though I am mandating relaxation to myself.
So why do I want to include other work in it? I don't, and I shouldn't. While it's OK to do something else from time to time, there's a reason I need to relax in the first place. If I begin to incorporate other tasks into it, the meaning and purpose is gone.
There is always the push to always be 'productive'. Whether it's the non-stop data feeds of RSS and email, the numerous GTD posts, blogs, gurus, or just the fact that there are more things to do than time to do them, we often lose sight of relaxation. Relaxation IS productive, probably more so than half the things I do to 'stay on top of things'. When I am in a situation that is calming and relaxing, I have a better chance of seeing through the problems and issues I may be facing at that time. I can allow all the half-thoughts to either complete themselves or filter there way out.
And most importantly, I can watch baseball.
You need to turn 'off' the multi-tasking and networking from time to time.
Smoking cigars is something I do to relax and unwind. It's somewhat of a carryover from the 15 years I smoked cigarettes (yes, I started smoking at age 10), some of it is tied to my father's own cigar smoking, but mostly it's a reason to sit down and decompress. Given that it takes a good 45 minutes to an hour to smoke a cigar, it's almost as though I am mandating relaxation to myself.
So why do I want to include other work in it? I don't, and I shouldn't. While it's OK to do something else from time to time, there's a reason I need to relax in the first place. If I begin to incorporate other tasks into it, the meaning and purpose is gone.
There is always the push to always be 'productive'. Whether it's the non-stop data feeds of RSS and email, the numerous GTD posts, blogs, gurus, or just the fact that there are more things to do than time to do them, we often lose sight of relaxation. Relaxation IS productive, probably more so than half the things I do to 'stay on top of things'. When I am in a situation that is calming and relaxing, I have a better chance of seeing through the problems and issues I may be facing at that time. I can allow all the half-thoughts to either complete themselves or filter there way out.
And most importantly, I can watch baseball.

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