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- May 27, 2008: How long is not long enough?
- October 5, 2007: My Personal Mission Statement
- July 21, 2007: Starting Over
- July 3, 2007: 7 Wonders of Joyful, Jubilant Learning
- June 20, 2007: Quest for Productivity Nirvana Post #6 - When to Say No
- June 16, 2007: The Quest for Productivity Nirvana, Post #5 - When to Ask For Help
- April 18, 2007: Quest for Productivity Nirvana, Post #4 - Where are the out baskets
- March 14, 2007: The Quest for Productivity Nirvana, Post #3 - Where are the in baskets?
- March 9, 2007: The quest for productivity nirvana series, post #2 - Hard vs. Soft Landscape
- March 5, 2007: The quest for productivity nirvana, Post #1 - Series Purpose and Overview
Information Overload
I used to consider myself a good multi-tasker. Then, several months ago, I started to feel drained - constantly. I would be pushing things around - doing little bits of three or four projects at a time - without the opportunity to finish one, get that since of accomplishment, and move on to the next. For a week, I tried to do a good job of only doing one thing at a time - no multi-tasking. Since I keep a pretty detailed journal of the tasks I complete on a daily basis, I realized I was getting as much done doing one thing at a time as I was trying to work on three or four things at the same time.
In my opinion, multi-tasking came about when email and our first rounds with internet connection came online. Early internet connections were slow - hence we would load a web page, wait while it loaded, and then could go back to it once it loaded. In essence, multi-tasking came about because we needed to fill that time while the page loaded. (I once had a dial up connection so slow I could make breakfast while the page loaded). As faster connection speeds has come about our need to fill that void while pages load has ceased, but our urgency to try to do multiple tasks at one time has not. We still think of ourselves as multi-taskers and so we try diligently to live up to the expectation of doing multiple things at the same time.
In this same vein, the amount of information not only to which we have access in order to make decisions, but also the paths that information can take to get to us have increased tenfold in the last five decades. Crackberries, IMs, emails, multiple email accounts, RSS feeds, cell phones, voice mail, unified messaging, and much more have forced their way into our personal space and we allow them to constantly draw our attention from what’s important (relationships, personal growth, happiness) to what’s urgent (fires to be put out, projects to be completed). What if we turned off all those items for a day and focused on the really important stuff?
I’m interested in the studies that say information overload is actually good for us and that it can allow our brains to make more connections between topics and expand our horizons a bit. While I certainly don’t disagree with that at all, I also believe that we need points of rest and that those points need to occur more often than what they probably do right now. I often use an analogy that was included in a humourous Internet post about cats and how they are “distracted by shiny things”. All the information coming into us in all these formats comes as a myriad of shiny things which draw our attention. However, if I also learned a lesson from my cat, it’s to take frequent rest breaks (my cat takes full on, sleeping on his head he’s so out of it, naps). Our bodies and our brains need a chance to digest information, think about it, process it, and then determine what we can do with that information that might change the world.
So, while information overload might be good for us, it’s also important to set limits - delete a few emails that aren’t critical for you to read, without reading them. Say no to a project or an idea - even if just for now. Spend time with your family, your coworkers, your staff in a supportive environment - rather than just a run, run, run type of world. Take time for yourself - doing something you truly enjoy.
3 Responses to “Information Overload”
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March 6, 2007 at 9:27 pm
Hey Kara, have you seen this: http://www.micropersuasion.com/2007/02/transform_gmail.html
I use this with Firefox and the GTDGmail add-on to control my emails in a very quick and painless fashion.
March 6, 2007 at 9:39 pm
Stephen,
That’s actually one of the articles I have bookmarked in my “to blog” folder to include in a later issue. I struggle with work email though as I’m on a somewhat closed system. In the perfect world I’d really get down to just one email in box, but right now I have some limitations on the ability to do that. I too have used the Firefox add in with the GTDGmail add-on for Gmail inbox control and it does work incredibly well.
Kara
March 6, 2007 at 9:52 pm
Do you use Outlook at work? Can you add accounts? My work computer/server system filters out all sorts of things, but I have loaded my work Outlook with the POP info for my Gmail addresses so that I can access all of my mail at work. Then, at home, I use Gmail forwarding to my website accounts that use POP access in Thunderbird, so I am able to access all of my email accounts at home too. The email+GTDtag@gmaildotcom part is awesome, because when I need to look something up, I just search through the appropriate tag. Soon I may switch it all around and just use Gmail, as Google is getting ready to allow POP retrieval from other email accounts. Very exciting, as it will be the “universal” account.