Colter Reed

Is Your Task List Weighing You Down?

One of the drawbacks to paper planning is that unfinished tasks don’t roll over from day to day. If you don’t finish something today and you need to do it tomorrow, you have to copy the task to tomorrow’s task list.

One of the drawbacks to digital planning is that unfinished tasks will automatically roll over from day to day. Tasks can automatically appear on your list (OmniFocus can hide tasks until their defer date), but once they’re on your task list, they don’t come off until you complete it or delete it.

If you’re not careful, your task list gradually swell and start to weigh you down. You remember the scene in The Incredibles where Mr. Incredible is getting hit by the intruder neutralization orbs? That.


I just went through this as the holidays were approaching. Work, church, and life all got busy, and my task list started growing as tasks went on faster than they were finished. Things finally calmed down mid-December, and it took me the rest of the year—while on vacation—to work through it all. If I hadn’t violated each of the following four principles, I could have gone into the holidays with a much shorter list.

Some things from my mid-December task list got done. Some got rescheduled, delegated, or dropped entirely. I finally got through it all, and was able to start the new year with a clean slate.

It takes a focused effort to keep your task list relevant and useful. It’s a tool that should help you accomplish incredible things, not a burden to weigh you down.

Question: How do you keep your task list lean and mean? Share your thoughts in the comments, on Twitter, LinkedIn, or Facebook.

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