Often, there’s nothing more satisfying than crossing a task off of your gargantuan to-do list. In fact, it’s a feeling that can be addictive. Once we cross off one task, we go after the next one so we can experience that feeling all over again. But how many of those eliminated tasks really helped you move forward in achieving your ultimate goals? asks Vickie Milazzo. She provides advice that will help you break this feel-good addiction and start achieving Big Things. In today’s world, we’re constantly sabotaged by
nonproductive energy wasters. There are emails to read. Facebook
statuses to update. Receipts to locate for that already-late expense
report. Dishes to be washed. Files to be organized. And on, and on, and
on. These are the easy, albeit often unproductive, tasks that make us
feel good. They may not get you any closer to accomplishing your greater
goals, but at least you’ve checked a couple of things off your
to-do list. Unfortunately, says Vickie Milazzo, this addiction comes at a
high price, because that cheap check-mark high is guaranteed to
frustrate, overwhelm, and stress you out in the long term. You feel
busier than ever but are accomplishing less of real value. “I too am a happy checker-offer,” says Milazzo, author of Wicked Success Is Inside Every Woman (Wiley, 2011, ISBN: 978-1-1181-0052-3, $21.95, WickedSuccess.com).
“Working for two hours on a huge project I won’t finish doesn’t release
the same amount of endorphins as cleaning out my inbox. After two hours
or so, I want to check something off my list. That’s when I indulge my
own feel-good addiction and attack the stack of bills, plow into the
financials, or grab my mouse to viciously click through my email.” Are these feel-good tasks the best use of our time? No, says
Milazzo, and they often snowball until an entire workday is behind you.
One email leads to two. After all, it only takes two minutes to fire off
an email. Then there are calls to be returned. Two minutes turns into
20 as one item leads to another. Even if you set them aside once you put
your attention to them, these small tasks buzz around in your head and
have the potential to distract you for
hours. Before you know it, quitting time arrives and you haven’t
accomplished a single step toward your most important goals. “Maybe it’s the curse of the modern world, but often, our
important tasks fall prey to the feel-good addictions of easy ones,”
says Milazzo. “By majoring in minor things, we never get to our big
commitments. Breaking these addictions opens the door to achievement.
What you engage and focus on is where you will yield results. “Going after larger accomplishments—an addiction to
momentum—is a far more lasting high than the transitory feel-good of
checking off trivial tasks. Once you’re engaged in accomplishing what I
call the ‘Big Things,’ you’ll approach routine matters with laser-sharp
focus, quickly deleting, delegating, and experiencing fewer
distractions. More important, your creativity and productivity catch
fire, and the momentum
keeps you pumped. You’ll glide through your day full of confidence and
satisfaction from achieving significant milestones.” Here are 12 easy steps to help you stop doing what feels good and start doing what matters: Define three Big Things.
Identify three Big Things that connect to your passionate vision, then
choose one to schedule your day around. For example, your Big Things
might be to get promoted, live by the ocean, or achieve financial
security. So today you might agree to take on a high-profile work
project in order to put you in the running for that promotion. Or you
might start the search for your beachfront property. Or maybe you’ll
develop a household budget. “Set a target date for each of your Big
Things,”
says Milazzo. “And begin working steadily toward achieving each of them.
Start strong and you’ll experience genuine elation from achieving real
goals and solving real problems.” Challenge your plan of action.
Often, we take a tiny step toward achieving a Big Thing to save us from
having to make a big commitment and to ward off feeling guilty about
not going after our passions. For example, flipping through a magazine
on beach properties might make you feel better, but it isn’t really
helping you toward achieving your goal. “Constantly ask yourself,
Am I really going for my goal all the way? Or if it’s too tough, will I quit?”
advises Milazzo. “Make sure your plan of action is doable. Assess each
step when you are taking it and make sure it’s the right thing for you
to be engaged in at that time.” Turn off cyberspace. There’s
no greater blow to productivity than breaking your concentration to
reply to an email as soon as it hits your inbox. Remember, no award will
be handed out at the end of the day for the person who responded to the
most emails the fastest. If you’re doing nothing but responding to
email, you’re bouncing around like a pinball. It’s also important to
keep in mind that the purpose of email is not to generate more email.
Unless a response is necessary in order for the sender
to move ahead on a task or project, it’s okay to let them have the last
word. “I’m
not saying that email isn’t important, but there is a time and place
for it,” says Milazzo. “If you let it, it will absolutely distract you
from more important tasks. If you can’t bring yourself to close your
email box, at least turn off the sound alert and pop-ups so you won’t
have the annoying ‘ping’ sound and flash notification every time a
potential time-waster drops out of cyberspace and into your mental
space. Think of yourself as an
ER nurse using her triage skills. Don’t start the surgery unless the
patient is critical. Email doesn’t bleed out, doesn’t need
defibrillation, and, unlike a critically ill patient, won’t expire if
not tended to immediately.” Turn off the TV. Every
hour you sit in front of the TV you’re accomplishing nothing. Every
second of that time is irretrievably lost. If you’re struggling to let
go of this feel-good addiction, start by turning your TV off one day or
one hour a week. Instead, spend that time working on your Big Thing. “If
you dare to fully realize the phenomenal power of TV-banishment, take a
week off from watching,” suggests Milazzo. “You might already be
gasping from withdrawal pains, but I guarantee you that if you do,
you’ll be taking back a significant amount of your time and making
something wickedly powerful happen. You’ll never again find yourself
saying, ‘I’m too busy to…’” Tame the social media beast. Social
media can be just as time consuming as watching TV. It’s fun to read
the details of friends’, family’s, and clients’ lives and to see the
photos they’ve posted on Facebook. It makes us feel good when they
“like” something we’ve posted or when we’re tagged in one of their
photos. That’s one reason social media is so addicting—it’s like
experiencing human hugs all day long. Now that you understand why you
like it, it’s
time to tame the beast. “Social
media can quickly move from a social communication to an obsessive
compulsive disorder,” says Milazzo. “You can get caught up in all of the
things to do there—the games and other ancillary applications. That’s
my big issue with social media. Let’s face it, clicking your mouse to
get points to build a hen house for your farm or sending someone virtual
hugs, flowers, or groceries seems like a crazy waste of time. Does ‘I
got a new llama for my herd
today’ really sound better to you than ‘I made three sales calls on new
clients’? “Wickedly
successful women avoid those meaningless feel-good addictions. We spend
our time growing our lives and careers, not fertilizing our virtual
fields. We measure our lives in seconds, not just hours and days. Social
media is a great thing and can be a valuable tool. It’s changing the
way we connect and communicate. Just make sure you’re using it to
advance relationships and meaningful engagement.” Set aside sacred “momentum time.” Momentum
time is the only way you can stop being a slave to petty distractions.
It’s the precious time you are able to set aside for yourself each day
to work uninterrupted toward achieving one of your Big Things. To carve
out time, examine every activity and decide how to eliminate it,
delegate it, hire it out, or do it faster. “My
office opens at 8:00 a.m.,” says Milazzo. “Often by 7:50 there’s a line
of penitents forming outside my door: employees asking for my input on
projects, directors telling me why they won’t meet a deadline, and the
janitor asking me to diagnose a toenail fungus. Knowing this madness is
coming, I use my quiet momentum time, the early morning hours before the
office opens, to hunker down and work on those projects that need the
most concentration. “If
part of your day is rarely interrupted (such as early morning or late
evening), reserve it for momentum time. Keep your momentum time sacred.
Use phrases such as, ‘I’ll be available in one hour. What time after
that works best?’ Start your day with a two-hour uninterrupted chunk,
then gradually add more two-hour momentum sessions each day. Claim your
momentum time and you’ll find those lost hours you’ve been looking for.”
Interrupt the interrupters.
Statistically, you’re interrupted every seven minutes in the workplace.
Today we’re bombarded by a plethora of interruptions that we invite
into our mental space—email pop-up notifications, Facebook postings,
text messages, Twitter streams, and blinking message lights. “Whether
you’re working at home with family around you, in an office with
colleagues, or camped out in a Starbucks with your laptop, you’re going
to be interrupted,” says Milazzo. “I personally think there’s a secret
alarm or flashing blue light that goes off the moment I shut my office
door to focus. It seems to be a shout-out for people to start lining up
to interrupt and ask me questions ranging from the important (Please
approve the advertising budget.) to
the mundane (Can I leave early on Friday?). “But
there’s really only one person responsible for interrupting the work
you’re doing and keeping you from getting to your Big Thing. That person
is probably responsible for more interruptions than anyone else in your
home or office. Who is the responsible party? That’s right—you. It’s
more important than ever to work with focus and a consciousness about
whether you’re on or off focus. If you can interrupt the interrupter,
you’ll get a whole lot more
done.” Alternate momentum time with “weed pulling.”
Miscellaneous routine tasks are like weeds in your garden: we all have
them and no matter how often we get rid of them, they never go away. Yet
they do have to be handled, and pulling a few weeds can provide a
restorative break from more intensive work. Separate tasks into two
categories—“Big Things” and “Weeds.” After each momentum session, devote
15-30 minutes to weed pulling—handling email, phone calls, and other
minor tasks. “Don’t
try to tackle all your weeds at once,” advises Milazzo. “Prioritize.
Set aside a three-hour block periodically to do the deep weeding and
organizing. But if you just need a five-minute break from your Big
Thing, don’t tackle the weeds. They will only distract. Use those five
minutes to refresh your energy with a stretch or a bit of nourishment,
raw nuts or a cup of healthy green tea.” Focus on one Big Thing at a time.
When you engage in too much at once, you risk finishing nothing.
“Finish your first Big Thing or at least reach a significant milestone
before embarking on the next,” says Milazzo. “I have difficulty
following my own advice on this, and do have to tame the beast of ‘too
many good ideas.’ But on this, do as I say, not as I do—engage one Big
Thing, then the next and the next.” Use technology to your advantage. With
the advancements in smartphones and the development of iPads and
miniature-sized laptops, we can stay connected and work from almost
anywhere. The trick is recognizing when you are using these technologies
to your advantage and when they are distracting you from better things. “When
I travel, I can check my email on my iPhone before I even pick my
luggage off the conveyer belt,” says Milazzo. “So when I hit the hotel
I’m ready to accomplish Big Things—the reasons I traveled to begin with.
Likewise, I know when to turn it off. For example, when I’m at a
friend’s house or when I’m speaking to a group, I turn it off. In both
of these situations, the people I’m with deserve my undivided attention,
and I know that I’ll
get more out of the experience if I’m not thinking about where I can go
hide to check my emails and Facebook.” Let go of bad ideas. Successful
women can be successful at many things, so it is tempting to go after
all kinds of ideas, even ones that are not so great. “When we decided to
update our training curriculums for our online and live programs at
Vickie Milazzo Institute, we put extensive time into customizing the
material to each format,” explains Milazzo. “Midway we realized we were
creating a monster. Every future revision meant double the work. It
still breaks my heart to think of the hours that went
into this before we wised up and created one curriculum that worked for
both formats. That’s an example of a ‘great idea’ that wasn’t so great
after all. When a ‘great idea’ isn’t so great, you have to be brave
enough to cut your losses and let it go. Doing so will free you to work
on the next genuine Big Thing.” Safeguard your momentum.
Accept that you won’t please everyone. Someone is bound to be unhappy
about the changes you make to focus on your Big Things. A friend might
get upset because you can no longer meet for lunch on Wednesdays. Your
spouse might complain because you won’t run his errands on a weekday.
“Bottom line, they’ll get over it,” says Milazzo. “Stop feeling guilty
and stay true to your goals. Surround yourself with friends, family, and
peers who support your vision. Discard
all discouraging messages. These are your passions and goals, not anyone
else’s.” “Wickedly successful women make big commitments,” concludes
Milazzo. “They go after big goals. As I like to say, they engage big.
They don’t settle for the small-time achievements that lead to the
feel-good addiction. They go after their Big Things. Put that to-do list
away and start thinking about the Big Things you want to achieve.” # # # About the Author: Vickie Milazzo, RN, MSN, JD, is author of
Wicked Success Is Inside Every Woman
(Wiley, 2011, ISBN: 978-1-1181-0052-3, $21.95, WickedSuccess.com). From a shotgun house in New Orleans to owner of a $16-million business,
Wall Street Journal
best-selling author Milazzo shares the innovative success strategies that earned her a place on the
Inc.
list of Top 10 Entrepreneurs and
Inc.
Top 5000 Fastest-Growing Companies in America. |


