Help I need more TIME
Social media takes a lot of time, is rewarding, informative and good for my brain cells, but it takes a lot of time. I watched Randy Pausch’ lecture on Time Management on a recommendation from Jinnan (excellent blog, Wisdom of the Cloud, worth a peek). What I hasn’t realised is that this healthy looking, interesting guy had pancreatic cancer and a few months to live. Time management was now in a different context.
- This thing I’m about to start doing – why am I doing it? What will happen if I don’t do it?
- Doing the right things adequately is much more important than doing the wrong things beautifully
- Someone who had made a list of 100 things to do in your life said ‘if I’m not working on those 100 things why am I working on the others?’

Do number 2 before number 3 and you become someone who has time
Other things that stood out:
- Find your creative time and defend it ruthlessly. Find your dead time and use it for phone calls, exercise etc
- The To do list – break it into small bits or it becomes too hard and do the ugliest thing first – absolutely.
- The 80:20 rule -this works great: 20 percent of my effort will give me 80 percent result. I can spend a lot of extra time making one thing perfect, or achieve another 3 things in that time. Good enough is OK.
- Dreams give us the first step to accomplishing what we dream about, and gives us a way of acknowledging that this is what we want.
- You don’t find time you make it by electing not to do something else.
- An interruption can be 4-6 mins on average but it takes another 4 mins to get your head space back. 5 interuptions is one hour gone
- Identify why you aren’t enthusiastic about doing the task at hand – more often than not because you’re afraid of being embarrassed because you don’t think you’re going to do it well.
- Sometimes you have to ask for help.
- Praise and thanks is better than monitory reward or a plaque (or an email from HR). Thank you cards (pen and ink) are rare, and, will make you memorable in your interactions with people. I have a good friend who has sent several handwritten cards which I keep on my bookshelf, because they made me feel good when I see them.
Time is all we have.
Randy Pausch was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in September 2006. He died died July 25, 2008, at the age of 47.
His lecture ‘Achieving your childhood dreams’ has over 10million views on YouTube, given Carnegie Mellon in September 2007
I’m challenged to think about my dreams and what it is I want out of life.











Great piece, Heidi – well worth the time to read and absorb.
Cheers, Iggy
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Great points. Puts things into perspective. Thanks for reminding me of this video. Now I just need to make the time to watch it again! aah …
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Heidi Allen Reply:
October 30th, 2009 at 4:29 pm
I was in two minds whether to include a digest or not but, exactly for the reason you mentioned, 1 hour is a long time… so I opted to include some thoughts. But he says it so much better… It’s a video that has stayed with me since watching it.
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Glad you enjoyed the video Heidi! My favourite point is “What will happen if I don’t do it?” I find asking myself this one question really helps to put things into perspective. His Achieving Your Childhood Dreams talk is even more inspirational, you better make time for it too
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