Once upon a time a mother and daughter who were working together preparing the Easter dinner. At one point, the mother took from the refrigerator fridge the ham that had been defrosting. Before putting it in the oven, she cut about an inch off of either end of the ham.
"Mom why did you cut the ends off the ham?", the daughter asked.
The mother thought for a moment, and then replied, "That’s the way my mother always did it."
Overcome with curiosity, as often children are, the little girl asked if she could call Grandma and ask her.
“Grandma, Mommy cuts the end off the ham before she cooks it and says that’s what you always did. Is that true?”
“But why Grandma?”
Grandmother thought for a moment and replied, “Because that is the way my mother always did it.”
At this point, nothing would do other than to call Great Grandma.
“Great Grandma, Mommy cuts the ends off the ham before she cooks it. She says she does it becomes Grandma did it. Grandma says she did it because you did. Is it true that you cut the ends off the ham?”
“Yes, indeed, my dear. I always did it that way.”
“But why, Great Grandma?”
Holding her hands about 10 inches apart, the great grandmother replied, “Because my pan was only that long.”
Up until now, our organizational tools were pencil and paper and we came up with procedures that made the best use of those tools. Our procedure was to make a daily to-do list. That insured that we would start the day with a list that was neat and legible and had some kind of order to it. The price we pay for it is the time it takes to rewrite that list every day and recopy all of the things we didn’t get done yesterday. Plus the truth of the matter was that the most of what is on the list does not have to be done today, it just needs to be done as soon as we can get it done.
Our circumstances are the different. We have a digital tool. When we check something off the list, it disappears. The list sorts itself. Undone tasks simply remain on the list for the next day. There is no recopying lists ever.
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