Set a timer for five minutes, list every nagging task, then drop each into a quick 2x2 or ICE snapshot. The forced constraint silences perfectionism, reveals hidden leverage, and gives you a decisive next step before your motivation evaporates or distractions retake control.
Your brain prefers simple comparisons over sprawling calculations. A small matrix externalizes trade‑offs, curbing choice overload and loss aversion. By visualizing effort against impact, you calm uncertainty, choose something worthwhile quickly, and begin, gaining feedback far sooner than elaborate planning would ever allow.
One product lead shared that a lunch‑break 2x2, sketched on a napkin, rescued her afternoon. Two high‑impact, low‑effort calls surfaced instantly; she booked them, unblocked teammates, and ended her day earlier. The small ritual outperformed her previous color‑coded backlog marathons.
Silence notifications for an hour, group messages into intentional batches, and sort requests by true deadlines. Many “urgent” items quietly expire when not fed instant attention. This habit reclaims calm focus, making space for important projects that otherwise suffocate under perpetual interruption.
Silence notifications for an hour, group messages into intentional batches, and sort requests by true deadlines. Many “urgent” items quietly expire when not fed instant attention. This habit reclaims calm focus, making space for important projects that otherwise suffocate under perpetual interruption.
Silence notifications for an hour, group messages into intentional batches, and sort requests by true deadlines. Many “urgent” items quietly expire when not fed instant attention. This habit reclaims calm focus, making space for important projects that otherwise suffocate under perpetual interruption.
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