Colter Reed

5 Reasons to Write Down Things You Already Did

Photo courtesy of © Adobe Stock / fotogestoeber

Last week, I sat down to work through my Today list after the kids went to bed. I had an incredibly productive evening! After almost two hours of knocking off one task after another, I flipped over to OmniFocus to check off what I had done and see what was next.

I could only check off three tasks. Three!

I had been following a stream of consciousness checklist, not a written plan. Pay this bill. Oh, yeah, pay that other bill. Schedule the bill in YNAB. Import available transactions. Balance YNAB. What envelope is that Amazon purchase? Oh, yeah, place order with Amazon. Place order with Google Shopping Express…

So I did what any self-respecting productivity enthusiast would do: I entered everything I had done into OmniFocus and checked them off.


I’ve often seen jokes about this kind of ex post facto planning. “If you’ve ever written down a task after you’ve done it just so you can check it off, you might be addicted to time management.”

We’ve all done it. Which is good, because there are several benefits to it.

Why do we not write down the things we need to do? If we’re busy, Siri can capture pretty quickly (not that it takes that long to open OmniFocus and jot down an idea to process later).

Personally, I struggle with feeling like my to-do list is for the important things I want to get done today—the big rocks. Then there’s all the gravel that I have to take care of, too. These are the little cues that pop up throughout the day, after I have my plan in place. An email comes in that I need to respond to. One of the bulbs over the bathroom sink has burned out. The gas gauge has dropped below half a tank.

No matter how trivial or unbidden a task is, putting it into your trusted system is the best way to get it done, get it off your plate, and get on with the other things in your life—the things you really want to be doing. Write it down and forget about it.

Even if you’ve already done it.

Question: Do you write down tasks after you’ve already done them? Share your thoughts in the comments, on Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.

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