Because task starting is legit hard and I don’t think it needs some mystical explanation. The way to adress this is to break it town to small tasks and start at it. When I start my remote software engineers work day I start with a checklist to what I want to do - thats already first tiny task that sets me into work mood. Then make the first points easy loke “check email x”, “check website Y” etc.
It’s important to be descriptive with your tasks and just don’t write “check all emails” because those are demotivating and tiring just looking at it. Use multiple points of “check customer X emails”, “check email replies”.
Ive been working remotely for over 20 years so I’m very familiar with this issue and this tip is the best one I can give!
This is true for starting anything. When I’m getting ready to run, I know I have a five minute warmup then a stretch, then the run, but when I start, it’s just a five minute warmup – nice and easy, no rushing.
For a work example, if I’m dreading starting something, I’ll spend a little time the day before just getting ready for it. Get the data accessible, write a checklist (as above, very helpful for offloading brain work onto the page), get reference documents ready (printed), etc.
Because task starting is legit hard and I don’t think it needs some mystical explanation. The way to adress this is to break it town to small tasks and start at it. When I start my remote software engineers work day I start with a checklist to what I want to do - thats already first tiny task that sets me into work mood. Then make the first points easy loke “check email x”, “check website Y” etc.
It’s important to be descriptive with your tasks and just don’t write “check all emails” because those are demotivating and tiring just looking at it. Use multiple points of “check customer X emails”, “check email replies”.
Ive been working remotely for over 20 years so I’m very familiar with this issue and this tip is the best one I can give!
This is true for starting anything. When I’m getting ready to run, I know I have a five minute warmup then a stretch, then the run, but when I start, it’s just a five minute warmup – nice and easy, no rushing.
For a work example, if I’m dreading starting something, I’ll spend a little time the day before just getting ready for it. Get the data accessible, write a checklist (as above, very helpful for offloading brain work onto the page), get reference documents ready (printed), etc.