![]() My wife is a supercommuter, living at home with me and our three kids on the weekends and then working in another time zone Monday through Friday. Getting things out of my brain and onto the inbox, then I will fully flesh them out later. Reminders of "TPS reports" at work that I need which are on odd schedules. Reminders of daily tasks that I need to get done (journaling, reading, taking out the trash). Grocery style lists at several different stores. The biggest positives: keeps me from forgetting stuff, helps me be more productive, gets stray thoughts off my brain, and helps my marriage. How about you? I’d love to hear why others here are using Todoist. At the end of the day when I hit #TodoistZero because I’ve checked off all of that day’s tasks (or, more likely, rescheduled what I didn’t get to for another day), I feel immense satisfaction.įor me, I use Todoist because it helps me feel done. I’ve been starting to think the principal motivation is actually the sense of freedom from feelings of guilt or obligation that there’s something else to do. But I think there’s been a larger goal to it than just achieving organization. Disorganization and parenting don’t go together. But over the years, I have become increasingly and more aggressively planned and scheduled. I’ve been using it for four or so years (Karma: Grand Master, 42,158 - though it’s been ages since I’d checked that), and I don’t know how I would live without it.įor most of my life, no one would have called me a very organized person. But even so, I’ve been thinking a lot about my relationship with Todoist. With the world so disrupted and my work-life routines so upended, much of what I used to track in Todoist has changed. Not how you use Todoist, but what do you think it’s good for?
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