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My Life Organized Activation Key

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Marcelene Pape

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Jan 25, 2024, 5:35:57 PM1/25/24
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<div>Are you ready to tackle your to-do lists? Keep track of all your tasks & appointments?</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>Get your life organized with our wide variety of planners, stickers & journals - thoughtfully designed to help you add the "fun" to functional!</div><div></div><div></div><div>Once you have the habits you want in your life, assemble them in a daily routine that keeps you productive. When you have good habits and can string them together into a strong routine, you can rely less on fleeting motivation and leave minimal room for procrastination and distraction.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>My Life Organized Activation Key</div><div></div><div>Download: https://t.co/hbUZqI1h4q </div><div></div><div></div><div>Unrealistic plans set us up for a spiral of shame and regret when we ultimately fall short of our goal. Make consistency a part of your life and get used to imperfection. By opting for continuous effort towards a realistic aim we create more room for everything we want to do in life.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Now that you know the ten aspects of the Organize Your Life framework, you can apply it to any number of areas in your life. By having some specific guidelines, you can approach each area with more confidence and less stress.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Balance work goals with life. Burnout is when ambition overtakes balance. While you may love your job and are focused on mastery, ensure you make time for rest and recovery. The best physical competitors regularly sleep more than 9 hours each night. Train like an athlete: go hard, but prioritize off-time.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Make time for planning social outings. The older and busier we become, the less time there seems to be for spontaneous date nights and random coffee dates with friends. Proactively plan time with all the people in your life you care about, rather than waiting for plans to assemble themselves.</div><div></div><div></div><div>By learning the Organize Your Life framework, you can apply it to every area of your life that matters: home, work, relationships and everything in between. You can stop juggling balls and move onto the next act.</div><div></div><div></div><div>For context, I have an anxiety disorder, which makes me worry and fret constantly about many things, even those things that do not deserve my energy. Yes, I'm in therapy, but this has been a lifelong struggle for me that I'm only now starting to make a dent in. I'm also a perfectionist and a procrastinator, which mades juggling tasks, especially long running projects, all the more difficult. I deal with depression too, but sometimes I feel that it's secondary to the anxiety, which can be disabling and depressing in and of itself. One therapist has suggested I may have ADHD, but I have been tested and did not demonstrate ADHD.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I've been trying to keep a daily diary of TODOs and planning out my day's schedule on paper, but I'm finding it frustrating. Each day, I have to copy over all of my unfinished TODOs. Not only is that demoralizing, but it's also time consuming and discourages me from planning. Also, having to manually adjust my schedule on paper is frustrating and messy. I have papers everywhere with no semblance of organization. My daily TODO list is 20+ tasks long, not because I think I can accomplish all of that in a day, but because I do not want to forget about my tasks. I often feel like I haven't accomplished enough and that everyone else is far more productive than me. I'm very hard on myself, and I know that. I've set some kind of unreasonable standard for myself that I can never meet. I simultaneously feel like I have no time but also that I'm getting nothing done. I think that if I can start to feel like I have a handle on my life, that will help.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I would love to use a tool or multiple tools or even books or philosophies that could help me organize my life. I've tried to use apps before but couldn't really integrate them into my life because they didn't fit all my needs. I'm willing to pay money. Here are some of the features I think I could really use.</div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div></div><div>I've searched far and wide for an app that will help me get all aspects of my life organized. Recently I've stumbled upon the getting things done principles and I'm starting to read the book by David Allen.</div><div></div><div></div><div>When searching for alternatives My life organized popped up, the app looks great and I am keen to use it but can barely find much about it other than a handful of reddit comments and the site itself.</div><div></div><div></div><div>The more tasks that you can clear off of your plate, the easier it becomes to be a more organized mom. Several of the items on this list are aimed at lightening your load but this one is the most important and potentially the hardest.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Over the years we all accumulate a lot of stuff. That stuff takes a lot of time and energy to manage. The fewer things we have the easier it is to stay organized. So from time to time you should set aside an hour to go through a drawer, cabinet, or closet and purge the things that no longer bring you joy.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I call this moderate minimalism because we can all do with a little less, but there is no reason to feel pressure to strip your house down to the bare bones unless that really suits your aesthetic. Just work on being intentional about the items (and people) that you bring into your life and those that you allow to stay there.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Routines are everything when it comes to being a more organized mom. The fewer decisions that you have to make in a day, the more time and mental energy you have to handle everything that you day throws at you. While the truly unexpected does crop up from time to time, there are a lot of things about our day that we can control and routinize.</div><div></div><div></div><div>It can be something simple as putting your keys in the same place when you get home from work every day. Or having a set makeup look that you wear every day that you can throw on in five minutes or less. Take some time to identify those repetitive parts of your life that you can streamline and make more efficient.</div><div></div><div></div><div>I was mentally and emotionally exhausted from trying to keep the schedules of three other people, as well as my own to-do lists, events, goals and priorities straight in my head. Eventually, I realised I was becoming a disorganized person.</div><div></div><div></div><div>There are many reasons for disorganization including perfectionism, lack of skills, our beliefs and indecision, as well as mental health and brain-related conditions. When we understand the reason, it can help increase our ability to become more organized (and stay that way!).</div><div></div><div></div><div>When we are organized and our home and brain is free from clutter, we feel more calm and are able to focus and be more productive. We are also able to connect to those around us and be more spontaneous and fun without feeling overwhelmed, anxious or stressed.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Your beliefs about material objects in your life make it difficult and seemingly impossible for you to let go of things, people, ideas and emotions from the past. Having a cluttered home (or brain!) makes it difficult for you to feel organized and impedes your ability to focus and be productive. According to NBC News, evidence suggests that when multiple visual stimuli are competing for your attention, you have a harder time focusing.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Another schedule I like to make is for cleaning. Depending on your life you may have only one day a week where you clean everything. Or you might be like me and want to do certain zones each day of the week. You can schedule time</div><div></div><div></div><div>I did print it out and it is a very beautiful Tracker. And then I went out of town for three weeks. Now that I am back home, I will start working with the planner. I am terrible about "tracking" and always start with good intentions. I hope this one will make a difference in my daily life. I will let you know. Thanks!</div><div></div><div></div><div>New calendars are released every year in August and the updated binder is sent to you. I sometimes update sections with new/better content. Or add contents. You'll also get updates for that sent to you automatically! Your original purchase included free updates for life.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Now that survival mode has caught up to me and practicality and time efficiency is the name of the game, my violin practice charts consist of a cheap notebook, handwritten lines (I don't even use a ruler!), and stickers, pens, markers, pencils or whatever mode of marking off I can scrounge out of my unorganized bottomless desk drawer. But you know what....</div><div></div><div></div><div>I spent the month of December decluttering and cleaning my apartment that was beginning to feel unlivable. This cleaning episode kick-started me into a more organized life. I use my planner more, budget better, do meal plans, and run errands more efficiently. Doesn't this sound like a dream?</div><div></div><div></div><div>"I know people that have it tattooed on them," says Melissa Gray, a senior at the Culinary Institute of America. "It really is a way of life ... it's a way of concentrating your mind to only focus on the aspects that you need to be working on at that moment, to kind of rid yourself of distractions."</div><div></div><div></div><div>And it's a habit that some culinary students carry with them even when they're not in the kitchen. "You mise-en-place your life. You set up your books for class, you set up your chef whites, your shoes are shined, you know everything that you need every step of the day," says Alexandra Tibbats, another student at the CIA.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Gray says that she now arranges her home office as she would her mise-en-place. "My desk is specifically organized based off of where I reach for things the most. [It's] being so methodical to the point that you continually put your pen back in one specific place."</div><div></div><div></div><div>"Oh my God! If you don't clean as you go it is a mess!" he says. "And that's another thing you people at home could do: Because isn't the worst thing at the end of a successful dinner party doing a whole bunch of dishes? Wouldn't you rather break them all and buy new ones? It actually saves time if you clean as you go. It makes life so much easier."</div><div></div><div></div><div>Technology isn't only for work. It can help you make the most of your time so you can focus on what matters. Use the tips, Microsoft templates, and tools in these kits to get organized, plan events, and accomplish all you want and need to do.</div><div></div><div></div><div>Physical activity and exercise is the mainstay of chronic disease prevention and health maintenance for all people with and without a disability, and clear evidence exists of the benefits among various populations with neurologic disabilities. However, the potential benefits of organized sports for people with neurologic disabilities are not as well explored. In this narrative review, current evidence regarding the impact of organized sports on activity, participation, and quality of life in people with neurologic disabilities of all ages is summarized, and facilitators of and barriers to participation in sports for this population are discussed. The articles reviewed were divided into 2 sets: (1) children and adolescents and (2) adults. The subjects of almost all of the studies were persons with a spinal cord injury. Children and adolescents with a disability who engaged in sports reported self-concept scores close to those of able-bodied athletes, as well as higher levels of physical activity. Adults with a spinal cord injury who engaged in organized sports reported decreased depression and anxiety, increased life satisfaction, and increased opportunity for gainful employment compared with nonathletic persons with disabilities. General facilitators, regardless of age, were fitness, fun, health, competence, and social aspects, whereas overall barriers were lack of or inappropriate medical advice and facilities, decreased self-esteem, poor finances, dependency on others, and views held by others. The importance of this topic for further research is highlighted, and suggestions for future studies are proposed.</div><div></div><div> dd2b598166</div>
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