I realized I work better when I stop pretending I have a plan
Most days I start with a neat to do list.
And most days I ignore it.
I used to think this meant I was bad at planning. But after watching myself for a long time, I think it means something else. I work in waves, not in lines.
Some days my brain wants structure.
Some days it wants chaos.
Some days it wants to fix one tiny thing for three hours.
When I force myself to follow a plan on a chaos day, everything feels heavy. I keep switching tabs. I keep checking my phone. Nothing sticks.
But when I give myself permission to just start anywhere, something odd happens. I go deeper.
I might begin by replying to a message. That leads to checking a file. That leads to noticing a mistake. That mistake pulls me into solving a real problem. Before I know it, two hours are gone and something useful exists.
None of that was on my list.
For a long time I thought real work should look tidy.
Start here. End there.
Tick boxes. Move on.
But my best work never happens that way. It happens when I follow a thread that feels interesting or annoying enough that I cannot ignore it.
I am slowly learning to trust that.
Now I still write lists, but I treat them more like suggestions than rules. They are there to remind me what matters, not to control how I get there.
Some days I will finish five things.
Some days I will only fix one small broken piece.
Both are fine.
The only bad day is the one where I spent all my energy pretending to be productive instead of actually doing something that moved me forward.
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