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okay here's the case that we're going to
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be talking about today
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see if this is relevant to you so you're
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working really hard and you feel like
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you're always busy
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and things are always turning you've
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always got tasks and your task list is
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potentially
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really large however however
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you feel like you're not really getting
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anything done at the end of the day
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like at the end of the week at the end
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of the month you feel like how have i
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worked
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so hard for so long
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and yet for some reason my task list is
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not reduced
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and i i feel like some of the most
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important things that i needed to do
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still were not done like how have i
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managed to simultaneously be incredibly
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productive
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yet also procrastinate or just
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you know just like not achieve anything
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meaningful
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how is that possible that's the case
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that we're going to be talking about and
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it's a super
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super uh common type of issue and i
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think
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this might change the way that you think
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about the way that you manage your tasks
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and your projects because it certainly
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did for me so cue that intro music
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[Music]
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welcome to bigger plate my name is dr
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justin sung i'm going to be your host
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and we are talking about the concept of
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well the problem of doing a lot without
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actually having
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gotten much real meaningful work
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done how is that even possible it just
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the math doesn't seem to compute right
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how can you be actually doing tasks and
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taking things off and and being busy all
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the time like
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you might come home from work or from
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university and
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you're just like constantly busy you're
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like always doing stuff
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and then you get to the end of the day
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and it's like okay what's time to sleep
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and then i
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have to wake up and then it just repeats
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itself like where do i get the time
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to actually start making a dent
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on this enormous list of tasks and
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projects
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i felt this for a long time at the
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beginning of my kind of efficiency
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journey you know when i was in my sort
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of second and third year of university
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when i was starting to
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load my plate so to speak right for the
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very first time
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i already felt this and i went
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completely down the wrong track
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initially
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so the the track that i kind of went
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down originally was
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i thought okay well the issue is that
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it's taking me too long to do each of my
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tasks like if i'm studying it's taking
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me too long to study
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and if you're a student then okay
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chances are that's probably going to be
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a big contributing factor and reducing
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the amount of time that i needed to
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study made a big difference so if you're
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if you're a professional or a student
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and
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you're thinking like i actually need to
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learn how to
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learn much more effectively then that's
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that's a separate thing that's probably
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true and you should do that
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but even if you do that it doesn't
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always solve everything
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it does make a big difference because
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like the thing that's taking the longest
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amount of time out of your day
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you're being able to do that faster but
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it's not like a long-term solution
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because for example when you're working
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as a professional
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you don't always that's not always the
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issue like the issue isn't always that
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you
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like can get faster because sometimes
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it's just a time you clock out and you
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you can't
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leave before that and it's not always
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possible for you to fit in other work
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during
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your day and if you do it might make a
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small difference but it often
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isn't like a game changer
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like doing a few admin things here and
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there during your lunch breaks it's like
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yeah it helps kind of lubricate the day
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along and just get things going but
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overall it doesn't really make that big
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of a difference
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so the thing that changed for me the big
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perspective change
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was that it wasn't really about the
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speed or the rate or the efficiency at
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which i was using my energy it was
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actually the
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decision on what i would use my energy
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on at any given time
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and so we're talking about big picture
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here we're talking about
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prioritization and if you're listening
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you might think okay prioritization i
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get that
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and you might get it the you know
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prioritization is a concept and that you
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need to
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set clear priorities but that's not
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really what i'm talking about i'm
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talking about not just setting clear
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priorities
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but making really active conscious
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sometimes very difficult
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decisions about what is going to be a
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priority at any given time
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so let's talk about the eisenhower
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matrix one of the most
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important and effective and i guess as a
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result
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famous and well-known prioritization
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frameworks out there created by the dude
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eisenhower
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himself who breaks up a project or
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series of projects into four different
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quadrants so if you kind of imagine an
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axis right on the on one axis
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you have the urgency and on the other
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axis you have the importance
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right so you'd have four different
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quadrants
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here and on one hand you'd have the
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things that are urgent and important and
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then you've got the things that are
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urgent but not important and then you've
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got the things that are important but
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not urgent and then you've got the
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things that are neither
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important nor are they urgent and this
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is the way that you
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break it up so let me just talk about
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the framework first
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and i'll keep it brief because it's it's
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relatively simple to understand what i
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want to talk about more as a nuance
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around how to apply because a lot of you
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listening to it you will already have
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heard about this eisenhower matrix
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so if it's if it's a project or a task
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that belongs in that urgent and
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important category we call that the
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focus category this is what you want to
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be spending your time on because it's
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you need to get it done and if you don't
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get it done there are significant
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consequences to it because of the fact
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that it's important
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so that's fine you do it you execute you
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do that stuff
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the stuff that's important but not
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urgent these are things that will move
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the needle
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long term you know this might be like
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okay it's not important for me to
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necessarily do my taxes
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now but it is important for me to do it
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at a certain point it will have become
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urgent
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and sometimes it's by the time it's
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urgent it's almost too late like you
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needed to have worked on it
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from earlier so like learning a new
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language for example let's say that
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you're going to pick up a new job in
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another country and you need to learn
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how to speak mandarin
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when it's urgent that's probably when
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you're about to start work imminently
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and now it's too late and so you've
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missed that boat the opportunity is gone
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and now your life takes tangent because
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now you can't really work that job
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properly
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your performance will suffer or you'll
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lose your job or you know whatever there
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are there are significant consequences
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as well
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because of the fact that it was
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important uh but it wasn't urgent at the
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time so things that are in the important
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but not
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urgent category we want to schedule that
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and we want to plan it
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in and so we want to dedicate an hour or
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a week or an hour a day or
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whatever some meaningful amount of time
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towards doing these things that are
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important but not urgent and
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the ability to do that is an indicator
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of whether you get these high priority
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value things done
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then you've got the things that are
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urgent but not
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important so these are often like very
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life admin miscellaneous
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tasks things that kind of pop up during
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the day
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these are the things that because
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they're urgent you need to be able to
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get them done
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but you're not necessarily the one that
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needs to do it because it's um
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it's something that's just not important
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so this is the stuff that if you've got
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a team you should delegate but we're
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talking about personal efficiency here
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and i don't know about you but i don't
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really have
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i don't really have a team that i can
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delegate my personal tasks to they're
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still going to be for me to do
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so the ability to delegate doesn't
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really become relevant unless you can
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find a way to make that happen you know
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give it to a friend or turf your
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responsibility elsewhere
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or something like that but a lot of the
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time the urgent stuff that's not
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important you still need to get it done
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and you still need to be the one that
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does it
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but you don't want to spend much time on
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it because it's time taken away from
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every other priority
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so you need to get it done and the
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better ways to get it done is that you
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put them in batch
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so all your urgent but not important
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tasks you get them done like you give
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yourself a block of time
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every day to just get through all of
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those tasks and just smash them out
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and you do them in batch back to back to
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back because a lot a lot of these tasks
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often don't take too long in themselves
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and the ones that are potentially less
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urgent you just keep delaying it and you
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keep putting it off
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so there's a there's a bit of sort of
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like armchair wisdom that gets thrown
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down right is that you know you
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shouldn't put things off you shouldn't
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delay them and
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that's true to an extent in that
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you shouldn't because of the fact that
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you
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you want to have that mindset of being
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able to execute on things and execute on
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tasks and that's a really important
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characteristic and
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ability to have but on the other hand
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you do want to delay tasks if they're
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not
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important because there's something
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that's going to be more important to
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fill that time
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so even if something is urgent if it's
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not important
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if it's possible to delay it and
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actually still get it done
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later then it's better to replace that
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with a task that's not urgent
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but also important right so for example
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if you've got the option between
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spending 20 minutes to
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do some meditation and journaling which
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is an important yet not urgent thing
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that's going to make a big difference
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for you in terms of your ability to
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develop skills and manage yourself
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and remain optimized medium to long term
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or maybe even short term
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that's really important but it's not
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going to be imminent and urgent versus
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let's say sending out an email
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that is urgent you need to send it out
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today but if you don't send it out
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what's the consequence of it happen like
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of an issue there it's relatively minor
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then you should pick the other thing you
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should pick the meditation and the
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journaling
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now if the consequences is important
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enough that you're like okay i really
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actually
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should do this then
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you should see can i delay this more can
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i potentially send this out tomorrow
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morning can i send this out you know
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tomorrow evening
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if you can just delay it till then so
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you want to wait for it to be as urgent
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as possible because there's no benefit
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to doing it
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any earlier and taking time away from
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from an important task
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because in the future you may not have
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time to do the important task in which
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case you've spent
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double the amount of time doing
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something that was not important
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right so if you've got the opportunity
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to do something that's important for you
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always pick that as long as it's viable
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if it means delaying a task till later
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then delay it and be happy
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that you delay it because that in itself
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is a strategy
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you don't have to feel guilty about
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delaying that task and i i delay
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a lot of things on my list like i at any
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given
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moment on my to-do list will have
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dozens uh you know if not triple digit
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tasks that are waiting for me some of
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those have been delayed by such a long
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period of time
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that it's getting to the point where
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like i just don't even care about it
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anymore
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and eventually i'm going to end up
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chucking them into the
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non-urgent not important task list which
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is the final quadrant
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not important not urgent what do you do
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with these tasks you bend them
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you just don't do them simple as that
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and this is a
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mentality shift that i notice that a lot
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of the clients and students that i work
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with
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um struggle with is that
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the idea that you might have a task
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and you could potentially just kind of
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delete that from your inventory and not
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do that
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that being a legitimate not not just a
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legitimate like but
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actually recommended and encouraged
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strategy for dealing with
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this type of stuff that's something that
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a lot of people struggle with
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just the ability to say hey i've got a
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task that i need to do and i'm not going
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to do it
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because you don't actually need to do it
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so
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the the four quadrants are a great way
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of being able to manage your tasks and
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manage your projects
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here's where i see a lot of the issues
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come from and there's really three main
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issues that i've seen
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so i work with students and i work with
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professionals to help them become more
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efficient right that's kind of my job
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now
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and there are a lot of different little
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mistakes that people make but
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a lot of the time as long as you stay
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consistent and you keep trying to apply
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this framework to your
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daily life things tend to turn out
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reasonably well
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but there are sort of three main issues
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that i find that people face that would
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stop them from being able to achieve
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this
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by far the first most important one is
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that people are not strict enough with
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their prioritization
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they put too many things as important or
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too many things as urgent
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and here's something i learned while
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working as a doctor right
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urgent is urgent like urgent urgent
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so here's the difference right like if
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you're if you're working as a doctor
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what's urgent is that i need to get to
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this person and i need to solve this
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issue
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within roughly the next hour or so or
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they're probably going to die or lose a
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limb
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that's urgent
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saying that hey i need to really um pay
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my fine
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today because if i don't pay my fine
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they're gonna send me a letter to remind
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me to pay my fine in the next week
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that's not urgent okay that's not urgent
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there's no serious consequence there and
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the time urgency is so delayed that's
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not urgent
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so be really clear about what you mean
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by important
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and urgent set very clear criteria and
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follow that criteria don't let yourself
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just be emotionally bought into the idea
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of a task purely because you are just
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committed to the concept like you're
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infatuated with the idea of a task
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so here's a criteria that i set for
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myself and i advise all my clients and
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students to sit for themselves as well
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and it works okay
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if something is important there is a
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serious and significant
00:13:52
consequence and a negative detriment to
00:13:55
your life
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if it is not completed okay
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and often it is irreversible
00:14:03
so let that sink for a moment so let's
00:14:05
say that you
00:14:06
are thinking okay i should spend more
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time with my family
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great okay you probably should okay you
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can spend more time with your family
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there's absolutely nothing wrong with
00:14:17
spending time with your family in fact
00:14:18
spending time with your family is a
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fantastic priority to have
00:14:21
good on you for having that as a
00:14:23
priority and finding that valuable and
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important
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is that something that is at the daily
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basis
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for example let's say you're saying the
00:14:33
priorities for the next couple
00:14:35
couple days is that today
00:14:38
the most important thing for you to do
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what is the serious and significant
00:14:42
consequence for not spending time with
00:14:45
your family today
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versus what is a serious and significant
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negative consequence
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for i don't know not um getting on top
00:14:54
of this other project that you had due
00:14:56
you know like getting on top of certain
00:14:57
other work or what is a serious
00:14:59
consequence of not taking time out for
00:15:01
yourself
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let's say that your borderline burning
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out
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you know the worst type of jug to pour
00:15:08
out of
00:15:08
is one that is just cracked and broken
00:15:11
you don't pour anything out of that it
00:15:12
holds no water
00:15:14
so if you're getting to the point where
00:15:16
you're burning out
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and you need time for yourself and
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you're thinking no no i need to give
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time for my loved one or my family or
00:15:23
partner or whoever it is that's great
00:15:26
i'm very noble of you
00:15:28
but it's also wrong because
00:15:31
not spending time with that person today
00:15:35
in this case is not going to have as
00:15:38
negative of a consequence
00:15:40
as you taking time for yourself and that
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doesn't mean that you do
00:15:44
no longer value this other person or
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entity
00:15:47
it just means that today you yourself
00:15:50
are more important least of all because
00:15:53
you need to take care of yourself before
00:15:54
you can take care of other people
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okay and in fact you become more of a
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burden to the ones that you love if you
00:16:01
are like completely burnt out
00:16:03
and you just you know can't handle
00:16:04
yourself at all and you need to offload
00:16:06
all of your life admin
00:16:08
and miscellaneous tasks to someone else
00:16:10
because you just can't handle and deal
00:16:11
with it anymore
00:16:12
right that's like the ultimate like not
00:16:15
only have you not gotten a bigger plate
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the plate you've already gotten it's
00:16:18
like sign a crack
00:16:20
so when you're setting the priorities
00:16:23
set them with the time scale
00:16:25
that is relevant so i think about this
00:16:28
uh
00:16:28
concept called a heartbeat or a pulse
00:16:30
and
00:16:31
when i was a junior doctor in my first
00:16:34
ever
00:16:34
run professionally you know not as a not
00:16:37
as a student where i'm going through
00:16:38
clinical attachments in hospitals but
00:16:40
the run that i you know you're actually
00:16:44
a doctor you know you have you have some
00:16:46
level of real responsibility
00:16:47
albeit small because you're a junior
00:16:48
doctor my
00:16:51
supervising senior my consultant is what
00:16:54
it's called
00:16:55
he told me that i i need to have my
00:16:58
finger on the pulse
00:17:00
and that's because i there was a blood
00:17:02
test that had come through
00:17:04
and it was halfway through the day and
00:17:06
we were busy throughout the morning and
00:17:08
then we missed the blood test and he
00:17:09
said
00:17:10
like look you're busy but you need to
00:17:12
have your finger on the post you can't
00:17:13
have this blood test that doesn't
00:17:15
go seen like i i as your senior
00:17:18
shouldn't be the first one that sees it
00:17:20
and for me i thought okay look like i
00:17:22
had a busy ass morning you know i was
00:17:24
i had a lot of stuff to do i just didn't
00:17:26
have time to sit down
00:17:28
and check the blood test but the point
00:17:30
is i needed to have
00:17:32
made time because i need to have my
00:17:34
finger on the post that's a
00:17:36
non-negotiable
00:17:38
and uh he probably doesn't realize this
00:17:40
but that
00:17:41
statement actually had a big impact on
00:17:42
me because
00:17:44
it made me realize that there are these
00:17:45
non-negotiables that even if you don't
00:17:47
have time you need to make time
00:17:49
and when you think about the pulse
00:17:52
it depends on you know the ability to
00:17:55
make time depends on when you expect the
00:17:57
pulse to come through if i don't miss a
00:17:58
pulse
00:17:59
then let's say that your post is
00:18:01
happening every second
00:18:02
right well then there's no real time for
00:18:05
me to sort of take my finger off the
00:18:06
wrist because i'm going to miss a pulse
00:18:09
but let's say that the pulse that we're
00:18:10
talking about right now the heartbeat
00:18:12
the frequency is only coming through
00:18:14
once a day okay once a day
00:18:17
is the frequency at which things might
00:18:19
meaningfully actually
00:18:20
change in that case
00:18:23
i don't have to be checking things six
00:18:26
times a day because nothing is going to
00:18:27
really change
00:18:29
six times a day it's going to change on
00:18:30
a daily basis
00:18:32
likewise if things are changing on a
00:18:34
daily basis
00:18:35
but i'm checking it on a weekly basis
00:18:38
i'm missing the post
00:18:39
multiple times so
00:18:43
when you're doing this prioritization
00:18:44
think about what's your heart rate
00:18:46
here what's the what's the frequency of
00:18:48
your heartbeat
00:18:50
and how often do you need to check it so
00:18:51
that you don't miss the pulse
00:18:53
so for me on a daily basis things for me
00:18:56
tend to change priority wise once every
00:18:59
day or two
00:19:00
so i make sure to re-prioritize every
00:19:03
day or two
00:19:04
so i don't miss the pulse so my priority
00:19:06
for the next couple days
00:19:08
might be okay i really need to do this
00:19:10
this is my number one priority this is
00:19:11
my number two priority this is my urgent
00:19:12
and important this is my
00:19:14
this is the urgent stuff that i'm gonna
00:19:15
batch and schedule into my day and these
00:19:17
are the important things that i need to
00:19:18
schedule in
00:19:19
to make sure that even though they're
00:19:21
not urgent i'm still able to get it done
00:19:23
i set out all my projects and and wrap
00:19:25
it up like that
00:19:26
and then i do that and the important
00:19:29
thing here is that you know you want to
00:19:30
make sure that you put all of your tasks
00:19:32
into projects as much as possible so
00:19:34
that you can
00:19:34
prioritize projects instead of
00:19:36
prioritizing necessarily individual
00:19:38
tasks because that can be a very time
00:19:39
consuming process so
00:19:41
have all your tasks available and then
00:19:43
once every day or two
00:19:45
arrange them into projects this is
00:19:47
another reason why i'm a huge proponent
00:19:49
of using actual like digital
00:19:51
um ways of prioritizing like having
00:19:54
digital
00:19:54
task managers and things like that
00:19:56
because you want to be able to like
00:19:58
be on the toilet and think oh like i
00:20:00
need to do this
00:20:02
thing i forgot about doing this you can
00:20:03
just chuck it on your task list and not
00:20:04
really worry about it you kind of put it
00:20:06
in your inbox as an unread
00:20:07
and then later that day or evening or
00:20:09
whatever you you look at it again
00:20:11
and then you can you know you can then
00:20:13
re-prioritize it
00:20:15
so that's really important to be able to
00:20:17
collect all of the tasks and then just
00:20:19
batch
00:20:20
organize them into projects later in the
00:20:21
day and then you take those projects and
00:20:23
you arrange them into your priorities
00:20:24
and then based on those priorities you
00:20:26
create a schedule
00:20:27
that fulfills the kind of fundamental
00:20:29
requirements of how to use the eisner
00:20:30
matrix so
00:20:31
you do that and you follow the criteria
00:20:33
really strictly so the important
00:20:35
criteria was
00:20:36
super significant consequence and the
00:20:38
urgent criteria
00:20:39
is like it needs to get done like within
00:20:41
whatever that heartbeat frequency is
00:20:43
like it needs to be done today or it
00:20:44
needs to be done in the next hour or
00:20:46
whatever it is
00:20:48
so think about that hot b frequency
00:20:51
think about how often you need to
00:20:52
prioritize
00:20:53
and then that be aware of the fact that
00:20:55
the priorities change
00:20:57
every heartbeat frequency and that's the
00:20:59
reason why the heartbeat is
00:21:00
at that frequency is because that's when
00:21:02
things change so for the next couple
00:21:04
days
00:21:04
work might be really important for me
00:21:07
more important than family or friends
00:21:09
and that's you know okay because you
00:21:11
know like maybe it's so important that
00:21:13
if you don't get this work done there
00:21:14
there's a
00:21:15
serious significant consequence like
00:21:17
there's nothing wrong with saying that
00:21:20
and in the next couple weeks maybe you
00:21:23
know spending time with family or just
00:21:24
relaxing and time for yourself maybe
00:21:26
that's the priority when you're on
00:21:27
vacation and you just need a break
00:21:29
maybe the most important thing for you
00:21:30
then is the number one priority is just
00:21:32
to relax and not think about stuff maybe
00:21:34
that's the most important priority but
00:21:35
it's about being explicit and about
00:21:37
being clear and being really in tune to
00:21:38
what it is that you need
00:21:40
at any given time and if you try to do
00:21:43
everything
00:21:44
if everything is high priority all the
00:21:46
time
00:21:47
you never really get anything done it
00:21:48
just doesn't that is when the maths
00:21:50
truly does not add up and it's when it
00:21:52
just truly does not compute
00:21:54
right so that's the first main mistake
00:21:57
or
00:21:58
issue that i notice is that people are
00:22:00
very lacks often about the way they
00:22:02
prioritize when they start first
00:22:03
using this and that it just doesn't go
00:22:06
in it just completely defeats the
00:22:08
purpose
00:22:08
right and the other the other um thing
00:22:12
is that if something is considered like
00:22:15
i don't know if this is important or not
00:22:17
just think about
00:22:19
how it contributes to the things that
00:22:20
are actually important in your life so
00:22:22
for example there might be a certain
00:22:23
task or task that doesn't belong to like
00:22:25
a wider project
00:22:26
but the task in itself seems like it's
00:22:28
relatively important for you to get done
00:22:32
does that align with the other values
00:22:34
and things that are in your life like
00:22:36
the way that you want to live right like
00:22:38
or is it just a task that seems
00:22:39
important
00:22:40
but actually you don't really care about
00:22:41
that in your life in general like for
00:22:43
example
00:22:44
i really need to like do some research
00:22:47
on which car i'm going to buy
00:22:50
but then think like do i really need to
00:22:52
buy the car like is that something that
00:22:54
i really
00:22:54
do want and so there's a sort of a level
00:22:57
even before that a bit more meta
00:22:59
we have to take a step back and think is
00:23:02
this actually
00:23:03
important for me in the first place
00:23:06
before i even assign it a priority
00:23:08
because
00:23:08
your view of how important it is might
00:23:10
already be framed
00:23:12
um to be skewed towards thinking it's
00:23:14
more important than it actually is
00:23:15
purely by virtue of the fact that it's
00:23:17
on your task list so don't be afraid of
00:23:19
kind of
00:23:20
just taking things out that you thought
00:23:21
were important because of the fact that
00:23:22
you just no longer think that it's
00:23:23
important you know that's perfectly okay
00:23:26
so that's the that was the first thing
00:23:27
the second thing is
00:23:30
that people are very unwilling often to
00:23:33
bin tasks and delete them
00:23:36
the only thing i can say to that is you
00:23:38
just have to do it
00:23:40
the safe back the fallback the safety on
00:23:44
this is that
00:23:46
even if you delete a task because of the
00:23:48
fact that you thought it wasn't
00:23:49
important
00:23:50
if you're feeling a bit anxious about
00:23:52
deleting a task like maybe it is
00:23:53
important or
00:23:54
maybe i do need to do it don't worry
00:23:56
just delete it
00:23:57
and the reason is because if it truly if
00:24:00
it's on that borderline of whether it's
00:24:02
important or not
00:24:03
it's at least not going to be really
00:24:05
important right and
00:24:07
remember the criteria that we set for
00:24:08
something being important or not is
00:24:10
actually
00:24:10
already pretty high so if something is
00:24:14
borderline on that importance
00:24:16
you know like it's it's hard for
00:24:19
something to be that
00:24:20
you know that borderline where it's like
00:24:22
is this going to have a
00:24:23
serious and significant negative
00:24:25
consequence if i don't do it
00:24:27
often you kind of know whether a will or
00:24:28
not it's like a hell yeah hell no kind
00:24:30
of division that we're making
00:24:33
so if there are tasks that you're
00:24:34
thinking okay this is not super
00:24:37
important
00:24:38
but i'm also not sure if it will become
00:24:40
more important or maybe i'm not seeing
00:24:42
it correctly
00:24:42
just bin it because
00:24:46
if it's truly something that ends up
00:24:48
being important it will somehow find a
00:24:50
way to make its way back onto your task
00:24:52
list
00:24:52
trust me on this one tasks are resilient
00:24:56
and if something really was important it
00:24:57
will come back on your list a week later
00:24:59
or
00:25:00
a month later or an hour later and
00:25:03
you're gonna then re-prioritize it so
00:25:04
don't worry about that okay the truly
00:25:06
important task they will end up finding
00:25:08
a way back on your list
00:25:09
and when it does find a way back on your
00:25:11
list maybe it will come back on as both
00:25:13
urgent and
00:25:14
important but that's fine because that's
00:25:16
you know
00:25:17
there's an area of your day there's an
00:25:19
area of your priority that's dedicated
00:25:20
for that
00:25:21
that you schedule and make time for
00:25:23
which is your focus list
00:25:25
so you can do that that's fine
00:25:29
it's better to over delete rather than
00:25:31
overcommit
00:25:33
so that's a that's the second issue and
00:25:35
the third issue
00:25:37
i kind of already mentioned it before
00:25:38
but it's trying to tackle every priority
00:25:41
all the time
00:25:44
and i guess the vice versa which is not
00:25:47
tackling the
00:25:48
the priorities that you're meant to and
00:25:49
it kind of goes hand in hand
00:25:51
you need to actually schedule your day
00:25:54
in a way that allows you to tackle
00:25:57
the focus tasks that are important and
00:25:59
urgent
00:26:00
and gives yourself time for the not
00:26:03
the not urgent and important tasks as
00:26:06
well as giving yourself time to
00:26:07
batch out the urgent and not important
00:26:09
tasks your schedule
00:26:11
needs to have time that allows for this
00:26:14
obviously the tasks that are urgent and
00:26:16
important take priority over everything
00:26:18
else
00:26:19
but what if you have so many tasks that
00:26:21
are urgent and important
00:26:23
that you never have time for your urgent
00:26:25
or not important
00:26:27
and you never have time for your not
00:26:29
urgent
00:26:30
not important tasks in this case you
00:26:33
have either over committed to
00:26:35
your like tasks in general
00:26:39
or you do have an efficiency on a micro
00:26:42
level
00:26:43
so it's now looking at a different
00:26:44
problem right
00:26:46
so you should always be able to set
00:26:50
time for the relevant quadrants and
00:26:53
if you are like doing every single task
00:26:56
every single day
00:26:57
and it's completely widely spread just
00:26:59
take a moment to think like is the time
00:27:01
i'm spending actually
00:27:02
you know aligned with my priorities
00:27:05
hierarchy
00:27:06
and if it's not have a closer look at
00:27:10
the time that you are spending
00:27:11
if you're spending a lot of time like
00:27:14
on the bus like in commute or you get
00:27:18
home and you're like i just never have
00:27:19
time when i get home because i get home
00:27:21
at like
00:27:21
5 p.m and i have to make dinner and i
00:27:23
wash up and everything and by then it's
00:27:25
like 7 30 and it's like whoa hold on a
00:27:26
second wait you're telling me it takes
00:27:28
you
00:27:28
two and a half hours to make dinner and
00:27:31
wash up
00:27:32
no that's probably unlikely there's
00:27:33
probably some time there you're probably
00:27:35
getting home five o'clock and then 5 20
00:27:38
you start making dinner and then after
00:27:40
you've made dinner you sit there
00:27:42
for like four you know 15 minutes and
00:27:44
then you
00:27:45
doing the dishes really slowly or
00:27:47
whatever and then like
00:27:48
you relax or scroll on your facebook for
00:27:51
like three minutes here
00:27:52
like so there's gonna be times and gaps
00:27:55
where
00:27:55
you it's going unnoticed because of the
00:27:57
fact that it's always pinned between
00:27:59
other activities and it goes unnoticed
00:28:01
so if you're spending 30 minutes on the
00:28:03
bus it's like what are you doing on the
00:28:04
bus
00:28:04
like what are you doing during that time
00:28:07
um or like i don't have time for
00:28:08
personal development you know i don't
00:28:09
have time to learn and upskill things
00:28:11
it's like oh do
00:28:12
you know like do you not ever like walk
00:28:14
anywhere do you never have like two or
00:28:15
three
00:28:16
minutes that you can just spend
00:28:17
listening to a podcast like this or
00:28:19
thinking about things or carrying a
00:28:21
notebook around like i used to make
00:28:23
phone calls to clients in the stairwell
00:28:26
moving between wards while i was working
00:28:28
as a doctor
00:28:29
just to try to fit in those things and
00:28:31
it made a difference
00:28:33
um so there are you know if
00:28:37
you're finding that you're really really
00:28:40
bustling and you just don't have any
00:28:41
time to spare
00:28:42
think again think a little bit about
00:28:43
really inspect your day and think are
00:28:45
there actually gaps
00:28:46
of time that i can be utilizing more
00:28:48
effectively
00:28:49
um am i kind of chunking my time into
00:28:52
too large of a block and not realizing
00:28:54
that there's actually
00:28:55
a lot of different points throughout the
00:28:56
day that i could be utilizing not to say
00:28:58
that you should never ever relax but i'm
00:29:00
saying that
00:29:00
relaxation should be intentional right
00:29:02
it shouldn't be like i come home at five
00:29:04
and then i start
00:29:05
cooking dinner at 5 30 it's like what
00:29:07
happened in the 30 minutes like were you
00:29:08
intentionally really relaxing and
00:29:10
therefore feel great in the evening
00:29:12
or was it just kind of like time wasted
00:29:13
just like potatoing around
00:29:17
and then if there really is no available
00:29:19
time that you can use
00:29:20
then it's going to be a micro efficiency
00:29:22
problem the ability to execute on tasks
00:29:25
and do them faster and more effectively
00:29:27
and again
00:29:28
this is a topic that we'll talk about in
00:29:29
a future episode as well
00:29:31
but anyway this is the most important i
00:29:34
think
00:29:35
time management task management life
00:29:38
hack that i've picked up over the last
00:29:40
like almost decade of working on this
00:29:42
was
00:29:43
really really be attentive to your
00:29:46
priorities
00:29:47
priorities come first then then comes
00:29:51
time management and task management not
00:29:53
the other way around
00:29:54
and if your priorities are done well
00:29:56
then a lot of the other issues will
00:29:59
in a way almost work themselves out
00:30:02
because
00:30:04
the energy that you are spending is
00:30:06
spent in the right direction it's spent
00:30:08
on the things that it's meant to be
00:30:09
spent on and you're not going to run
00:30:11
into that issue where you
00:30:13
worked super super hard and nothing
00:30:16
meaningful you ever got done because
00:30:17
maybe you spent all of that time on
00:30:19
stuff that wasn't
00:30:20
important potentially so hope that
00:30:24
helped
00:30:25
and i'll see you in the next one till
00:30:27
then stay efficient
00:30:40
[Music]
00:30:42
you