I believe the pomodoro technique had me accomplishing many tasks for one day, then it failed. It failed because I failed to start using the pomodoro method itself, I just procrastinated on starting it. I also got distracted while working. I either stopped working and never got on track again, or I forgot about the rules about distraction (record it, apply the 3 steps) and wasted a lot of time. Over time I just forgot about it. Thanks for reminding me, I’ll give it another go because it was so close to working and I can try different motivational techniques to get started.
I believe an “energy pill” (Elebra) also helped me get things done for several days before I succumbed to procrastination. I should try that again as well...
Idea for pomodoro technique: try making a 30 minute audio clip that consists of 25 minutes of “pomodoro timer noise” (some noise you condition yourself to concentrate on, e.g. find some waterfall clip or something), then 5 minutes of silence. Then play it on loop. Makes it easier to not get distracted when the timer is running and also ensures that the timer is always restarted. Make rules related to when you can turn off the looping, e.g. if you’re done with your homework for the day, or you spend at least 30 seconds writing down reasons to keep it on and decide that you should still turn it off even given those because you’re too tired to work effectively or whatever (see also). Maybe also make it give you a warning 30-60 seconds before your 5-minute break is going to end.
Given that you’ve failed at this so many times before, I’d recommend being extremely strict with yourself this time… really figure out in advance what the rules you’ll follow will be, brainstorm cases where you’d want to break them, and either add exceptions and decide to continue following them for every case that you brainstorm, and then be extremely anal about following the rules once you start actually using them. Additionally, probably make the rules pretty reasonable and easy to follow to increase your success odds even more (but still be an extreme stickler about following the rules you do set out; err on the side of following them too well). Also, if you’ve been failing at doing your homework a lot recently, I’d say give up on trying to do it ahead of time and just deliberately do it at the last minute for a few weeks, so you stop practicing the action of attempting to improve your study habits and failing (it sounds like you’ve practiced this a lot, and you don’t want to just keep practicing it. It’s not “practice makes perfect”, it’s “practice makes permanent”.) Have a day planned in advance when you will switch to the new pomodoro productivity scheme you’ve been working on… September 30, say (that’s a Monday, right?)
Since you asked me about the most effective technique I’ve used since this point, I started using the pomodoro technique with Beeminder. I have experienced a very dramatic increase in productivity. Thank you very much!
What’s the technique that came closest to succeeding and how specifically did it fail?
I believe the pomodoro technique had me accomplishing many tasks for one day, then it failed. It failed because I failed to start using the pomodoro method itself, I just procrastinated on starting it. I also got distracted while working. I either stopped working and never got on track again, or I forgot about the rules about distraction (record it, apply the 3 steps) and wasted a lot of time. Over time I just forgot about it. Thanks for reminding me, I’ll give it another go because it was so close to working and I can try different motivational techniques to get started.
I believe an “energy pill” (Elebra) also helped me get things done for several days before I succumbed to procrastination. I should try that again as well...
Idea for pomodoro technique: try making a 30 minute audio clip that consists of 25 minutes of “pomodoro timer noise” (some noise you condition yourself to concentrate on, e.g. find some waterfall clip or something), then 5 minutes of silence. Then play it on loop. Makes it easier to not get distracted when the timer is running and also ensures that the timer is always restarted. Make rules related to when you can turn off the looping, e.g. if you’re done with your homework for the day, or you spend at least 30 seconds writing down reasons to keep it on and decide that you should still turn it off even given those because you’re too tired to work effectively or whatever (see also). Maybe also make it give you a warning 30-60 seconds before your 5-minute break is going to end.
Given that you’ve failed at this so many times before, I’d recommend being extremely strict with yourself this time… really figure out in advance what the rules you’ll follow will be, brainstorm cases where you’d want to break them, and either add exceptions and decide to continue following them for every case that you brainstorm, and then be extremely anal about following the rules once you start actually using them. Additionally, probably make the rules pretty reasonable and easy to follow to increase your success odds even more (but still be an extreme stickler about following the rules you do set out; err on the side of following them too well). Also, if you’ve been failing at doing your homework a lot recently, I’d say give up on trying to do it ahead of time and just deliberately do it at the last minute for a few weeks, so you stop practicing the action of attempting to improve your study habits and failing (it sounds like you’ve practiced this a lot, and you don’t want to just keep practicing it. It’s not “practice makes perfect”, it’s “practice makes permanent”.) Have a day planned in advance when you will switch to the new pomodoro productivity scheme you’ve been working on… September 30, say (that’s a Monday, right?)
Since you asked me about the most effective technique I’ve used since this point, I started using the pomodoro technique with Beeminder. I have experienced a very dramatic increase in productivity. Thank you very much!
Wow, great to hear!