The Organized Blogger
January 20, 2009 by J.C. Hewitt
My adventures in organization have had a few rough days as I have been battling both a cold and a ruthlessly time-consuming new project at work. After performing the big purge on my home office, I have had to be content with small moments dedicated to the overall task pf putting everything in its place, especially all of the unfulfilled mental loops that come from 40+ years of living on this planet. There are many things I want to do, many things I need to do, and many things I need to decide I am never going to do. This is all part of the organizational process. You cannot get a handle on all the tasks that lie before you until you make an accurate list of them and decide what you are going to do about them.
Because I am using the Getting Things Done organizational system, I am obliged to make a complete and accessible collection of these unfinished projets. At minimum I need to list each project, the desired outcome, and the next action step towards achieving that outcome. Projects may be as minor as transferring data from my wife’s old notebook computer or as major as publishing a book of poetry or taking a trip to New Zealand. Once this information is collected, I need to track my progress on each item. This is no small task, but it is certainly achievable.
My first major hurdle was to decide what system to use to track these projects. Getting Things Done proposes several systems, but none of them suited me particularly well. Paper files were exactly what I didn’t want. The idea behind getting organized was to free up both my mental and physical space. I want to dispose of every piece of paper I can possibly be rid of, so having a file cabinet full of them was not a pleasant thought. I tried it, but I just had no enthusiasm for the idea. If I have too many papers to keep in an inbox, it is time to purge.
The alternative to paper was electronic organizers, but the problem with most of them is convenience. I want to be able to access my tasks from anywhere, but I don’t want them tied to a particular device because then I am out of luck if something happens to it. I needed something that I could access from my Blackberry, my iTouch, my personal computer and my work computer. In fact, the best solution would be something that I could use even if I didn’t have access to any of these. I thought about using some of the Google tools or some other online package, but I wasn’t sure I could have access to them from work. An organizational system would do me no good if I couldn’t use it in the main place that I needed it.
It took me an embarrassingly long time to realize that the answer was right in front of my face. What I needed was a blog! I’m a blogger. I know Wordpress better than almost any other tool at my disposal, and it is perfect for capturing individual items that require notes and updates. I can write as much as I want about each task and even attach files if I need to. The list is searchable and can be filtered using both categories and tags. More importantly, I can access the blog from every one of my key devices or from any open computer. I know enough about WordPress and file protection to keep the new site secure and invisible so that nobody needs to see it but me. I can even use the scheduling feature to move items into future cues so I see them on certain dates and not before. In essence, WordPress is my new organizational tool and it meets every one of my needs. Blogging has scored another brownie point in my life,
Of course, there is theory and then there is practice. I am still imputing all of my loops, but I’ll keep you updated on how things go and at some point I’ll give the details behind setting an organizational blog up for yourself.




John,
I’m eager to keep up with your progress. I would never have thought of using WordPress as an organizer, but your analysis makes sense.
Lillie Ammanns last blog post..Religious Freedom Day
It was something I never would have thought of, until I thought of it.
Okay I’m a total blog newbie. So you just set up the blog and make it where only you can look at it, then just embed a calendar or checklist? or do you use the posts as your list for organizing? Or am I just thinking to hard about it?
Rauls last blog post..I’m Hungry
Hi Raul,
Each blog post counts as a task entry. The blog software automatically dates the entries, and alows you to put future dates on entries so that they show up on certain days. No calender program is needed.
That is brilliant! Thank you for sharing this idea. I was stymied by the same problem some time back and sadly, put it off, creating yet another incompleted loop.
I don’t know why using a blog never occured to me – maybe it was just TOO familiar.
Hope you get to feeling better. Overload and sick make organization even more daunting.
Man, the simple answer right in front of your face is frequently the best. Thanks for sharing. I’m starting my own blog now (coincidentally, it will be the third one I started this week, although of course this one is different).
Man, you shared me a solution. Great and thank you! The daunting task ahead is inputing all cluttered old files but still important in my computer. Tsk. What a pity, some files have no soft copy.
Florentinos last blog post..Ti Sermon iti Sirkulo a Lata, 2
Hi Florentino,
You can always use a scanner for single sheets that you need to keep. Larger stacks papers are more difficult.
That indeed is a great idea. It’s such a surprise that we could really do so much with wordpress. Definitely will want to know how this turn out.