Write down 2 per sentence of to do list on each day of a week using adverbs. Monday to Sunday.
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I’m a big to-do list person. I’ve probably been making daily to-do lists on yellow Post-its for close to 15 years now. Every night before I go to bed I pen a bulleted list of all the things I need to accomplish the next day. However, inevitably, at the end of the next day I usually have a few items that aren’t scratched off the list. Those items get added to the top of tomorrow’s to-do. Yet the same thing happens the following day: I move a few uncompleted items to tomorrow’s list . . . and repeat the next day . . . and the next.
I rarely ever complete my to-do lists on the day I actually intend to. This invariably leads me to being a bit frustrated or even feeling a little overwhelmed at the end of the day. Surely I’m not the only one with this problem, so I looked for a solution for why my to-do lists were failing to get completed.
I read numerous articles about why to-do lists supposedly don’t work at all, why they work but I’m doing them wrong, and how to make them work. I tried various methods over the course of the week and found that no one article I read had the exact advice I needed to finish my daily to-do lists like a pro. But by using advice from various experts, I came up with a to-do list workflow that works for me. By the end of the week, I was completing everything on my to-do list every day. And I did it by making four simple changes to the way I to-do’d...
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