Heading Out on Your Own – Day 5: Create a Weekly Attack Plan
by Brett & Kate McKay
The
Art of Manliness
Growing up,
each day is pretty well-scheduled out for you. School from morning
til afternoon. After school sports or a job. Homework. Time for
bed. Once you leave home for the first time, all that structure
is gone; it is up to you to shape each day and get things done.
It's an open plain of freedom, and the way is so broad many young
men get completely lost.
It happened
to me. One of the things I struggled with the most my first few
months away from home was managing my time. I pretty much was flying
by the seat of my pants every day. Things in my life started falling
between the cracks very quickly, and I soon found myself struggling
beneath an overwhelming pile of to-do's and obligations.
Things turned
around for me as soon as I instituted a new habit: weekly planning.
Stephen Covey's (R.I.P.) First
Things First was the catalyst for the change. When I got
to law school, my weekly planning sessions became even more crucial.
The rigors of my legal studies on top of my work on the law review
and the Art of Manliness required that I had my days planned to
the minute so that I could get everything done.
The power of
weekly planning lies in the perspective and control it provides
for your life; instead of drifting along, you give yourself a birds-eye
view of the maze below, and harness your newfound freedom in order
to do, be, and get wherever you want to go. It allows you to manage
the day-to-day and often trivial tasks along with your long-term
plans and goals. Think of your weekly calendar as an Attack Plan
for Life: it's where you hash out the tactics and logistics to make
your long-term vision a reality.
Below I share
how I go about my Weekly Attack Plan sessions. It's sort of a mishmash
of time and task management ideas from Stephen Covey and David
Allen. I don't claim that it's the best way to plan your week,
but it's worked for me. Maybe it will work for you, too, or at least
inspire you to come up with you own system.
Establish
Your Attack Plan Day & Set Aside an Hour to Plan
Pick a day
that you'll use to establish your Weekly Attack Plan. The weekend
is a good time to do it because it allows you to both review the
previous week's successes and failures and look ahead to the next
week. I do mine on Sunday. I know some folks who do theirs on Friday.
Pick whichever day works best for you.
Set aside about
an hour on your chosen day for planning. The first few times you
execute a Weekly Attack Plan session it may take you longer, but
that's okay. After awhile, you'll establish a rhythm that will allow
you to breeze through it in about 45 minutes.
Go somewhere
where you can be alone and away from distractions. I like to do
my weekly planning sessions on Sunday nights in our home office.
When I was in college, I'd go to a quiet corner of the Student Union.
Pick
Your Calendaring Tool
Everyone has
their own preference for what to use for calendaring. Some people
prefer digital calendaring tools like iCalendar, Outlook, or Google
Calendar; others prefer using good old-fashioned pencil and
paper to plan.
Each format
has pros and cons. Digital calendars make planning re-occurring
events a breeze. They also can send friendly reminders to you via
email or simply as a pop-up on smartphone screens a few minutes
before your event. It's kind of like having a personal assistant.
Many digital calendars also allow you to share calendars with others,
which can come in handy when trying to sync multiple schedules.
The downside
of digital calendars, in my experience, is that they're kind of
a pain when it comes to adding new events, especially on your smartphone's
tiny keypad. You have to type in the event, select the time, and
decide if you want a reminder. Granted, once an event is created,
moving things around is a snap – just point and click. Voice recognition
software like Apple's Siri is beginning to eliminate this problem,
but sometimes Siri goofs up my schedule. Digital calendars also
share a downside common to all digital tools: if your device runs
out of power, you can't access your calendar.
With paper
and pencil calendars, you don't have to worry about running out
of power. When you want to add a new event, you can scribble it
down in seconds. There's also something about the tactile nature
of planning with pencil and paper that really gets your strategic
juices going. And because we're on our phones and computers so much
these days, it's nice to give
your brain a break with something different. But there are a
few downsides to paper and pencil calendars. If you lose your calendar,
you're sunk. Unlike digital calendars that exist eternally in the
"Cloud," when you lose a pencil and paper calendar, you'll have
to recreate it from memory. You don't get any email reminders about
upcoming events with an analog calendar. And if you have re-occurring
events, you'll have to write them out every. single. week. on a
new weekly calendar.
I used to be
a pencil and paper planner guy, but switched to digital calendaring
tools this year. I like having everything synced up across all my
devices. Experiment with the different calendaring tools out there
and pick the one that's comfortable for you. If you're looking for
a good pencil and paper weekly calendar, you
can download the one I created for myself when I was in law school.
Perform
a Mind Dump to Free-up Mental RAM
During the
week, our minds build up a giant list of stuff that needs to be
done: call mom back, do the laundry, respond to your backlog of
emails, study, etc. The problem with these loose ends camping on
our craniums is that they’re subtly eating up our willpower,
causing us to feel stressed out and mentally fatigued.
These unfinished
mental tasks are like programs you have running on your computer,
but aren't actually using. We've all had those moments working on
our computer when its fan is running full blast, and everything
seems to be taking an eternity to load. You check the Activity Monitor
only to see that a bunch of unused apps are hogging a crapload of
memory, causing your World of Warcraft raid to screech to a halt.
Just as unused computer programs use up precious RAM and slow down
your computer, so too do unfinished tasks use up willpower and slow
down your brain.
Free-up some
mental RAM and get your brain running on all six cylinders again
by performing a mind dump. A mind dump is exactly what it sounds
like: you get everything out of your head and onto paper
(or computer screen). You can actually feel your brain
let out a sigh of relief as you write down the stuff it's been spending
precious willpower trying to remember.
Use whatever
tool you're comfortable with for a mind dump. It doesn't matter.
I know several people who use a notebook and pen and others that
use digital tools like OmniFocus,
Things, Nozbe,
or Evernote to capture their mind
dump (I use Things). The important thing is simply that you have
someplace to store your mind dump.
Once you settle
on a capture tool, simply start writing or typing all the tasks,
ideas, and commitments that have been weighing you down during the
previous week. If you need some nudging on the types of open loops
you might having running in your mental background, check
out this "trigger" list from David Allen's Getting
Things Done. It's like a laxative for your brain. Just
go down the list and capture any unfinished tasks that come to you
as you read through it.
We'll schedule
items from our mind dump later.
Review
Your Life Plan & Goals
Now that we've
detoxed our brains and freed up some mental RAM, it's time to review
our life plan and long-term goals. This step will help you keep
"first things first" in mind as you plan your week out and ensure
you're staying on track with your long-term goals. Sure, you may
have been successful in completing your short-term goals, but if
those short-term goals get you off track with your future aims,
what good are they? If needed, reevaluate your short-term to-do
list in light of your long-term goals. You might need to amend your
life plan and goals as well, as new experiences and insights change
your vision of where you want to be down the road.
Don't have
a life plan or goals? Well, now's the time to create them. To learn
how, check out our
comprehensive guide on creating a life plan.
Review
the Previous Week
Reflect on
your previous week and how you performed in your various roles as
a man. How did it go? Did you achieve the goals you set for yourself?
What were your successes and failures? How could have you done things
differently? Any tasks or items you need to follow-up on? I recommend
writing down any thoughts that come to you during your reflection
on the previous week in a journal.
First, the act of writing helps make your thoughts more concrete
and well thought-out. Second, by writing down your observations
about the previous week, you create a record that you can look back
on to see if you're improving.
Set
Weekly Goals
After I've
reviewed my previous week, I start setting goals for the coming
one. I use Stephen Covey's role-based goal-setting method, but if
you have a method that works better for you, use it.
Here's how
the role-based goal-setting method works. When I created my life
plan, I defined and prioritized the different roles I fill as
a man: husband, father, brother/son, friend, writer, and business
owner. Your roles might be student, friend, roommate, boyfriend,
etc. Every week I create a goal that I want to accomplish within
each role. So for example, a goal for my role as a husband could
be to write Kate a love note or take her on a date; a goal for my
role as a writer could be to check out and read a book about improving
my writing.
I also follow
Covey's advice on creating weekly "Sharpening the Saw" goals. As
you saw away at your goals, the blade is going to become dull –
you have to take the time to sharpen it up. Thus Sharpening the
Saw goals are all about keeping yourself sharp in all aspects of
your life: physically, mentally, socially/emotionally, and spiritually.
I try to create a weekly goal for improvement in all of those four
areas. A weekly physical goal could be to bench press x-amount of
weight; a mental goal could be to read a book or listen to a lecture
on your commute
to work; a social goal could be to write
your college bud a letter; and a spiritual goal could be to
meditate
every day for 15 minutes.
Read
the rest of the article
August
8, 2012
Copyright
© 2012 The Art of Manliness
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