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Constructive Time Management
Posted By Richard Cockrum On October 10, 2007 @ 8:00 am In Productivity, Time Management | 9 Comments

Wednesday is Productivity [1] Day at AlexShalman.com
Are you a productivity junkie [2]? Do you think that time not spent directly related to a goal is time wasted? Do you plan out every minute of your day, every day of your week, every week of your year? Do you always have to be getting things done? Is time wasted nonproductive? Or is it constructive?
I’m Rick Cockrum. Alex has been kind enough to invite me to write a post about productivity and time management. Maybe because of my experience. I’m a full time social worker. My wife and I own and operate a movie theatre. I write one blog, Shards of Consciousness [3], where I also host a biweekly podcast. I’ve also been known to work in software development, having written my own pim and the software we use at work for all the social workers. All in all, it makes for a full life. To do everything I want to do, I have to manage my time, and manage it so it isn’t just productive, it has to be constructive.
The details of our lives are important. It is in the details that dreams are brought to birth, thoughts made manifest in the flesh of the world. But it seems to me that much of our lives have become increasingly mechanized.
Time management is important. Scheduling is a tool that helps us find the mental space to accomplish our goals. All too often, and it appears that with increasing frequency, scheduling has become an end in itself.
We have forgotten the difference between that which is productive and that which is constructive. For all too many people efficiency and productivity has become an end in itself. Productivity isn’t bad. It is a way to conserve resources and maximize our talents. But when it becomes an end in itself it becomes as much a blight as aimlessly wandering through our lives.
It is another way to remain unconscious, handing over the tools of living to the robot [4]. While my wife was in the hospital her sister came to stay with us to help run the house, something for which I am unendingly thankful. She always had to be doing something. She didn’t make a schedule on paper, but she was forever cleaning, going from one task to another.
Relax, I told her. Do something constructive instead. What do you mean? she asked. Meditate, write a poem, draw a picture, listen to the birds. Watch the clouds. She was endlessly productive, but never took time to be constructive. When something is constructive, it allows us to express who we are, who we want to be, where we want to go. It isn’t busy work just for the sake of being busy.
I can’t overemphasize the importance of writing in leading a constructive life. The act of writing down your mission, your goals, your tasks transforms them from dreams to commitments. It forces you to focus and makes what you are doing more real.
The interesting thing about maintaining a constructive life is that it is also productive. It’s a lot more fun than a purely productive life. It leads to personal growth. The reverse isn’t true.
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Article printed from Alex Shalman.com: http://www.alexshalman.com
URL to article: http://www.alexshalman.com/2007/10/10/constructive-time-management/
URLs in this post:
[1] Productivity: http://www.alexshalman.com/blog/category/productivity/
[2] productivity junkie: http://alexshalman.com/blog/2007/02/12/the-dangers-of-personal-development-addiction/
[3] Shards of Consciousness: http://www.shardsofconsciousness.com/
[4] robot: http://www.shardsofconsciousness.com/2006/04/bare-attention-reawakening-creativity/
[5] Image: http://twitter.com/home/?status=Reading @AlexShalman Constructive+Time+Management+http://gcc25.th8.us
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