I must admit ... I been busier than a beaver getting ready for winter! I'm very excited to share I JUST FINISHED WRITING GYPSY SPIRIT! I'm so excited how the story unfolded and ended . . . I will wait one more week - read it through and made changes, then send it off to my reader . . . before sending it on to my great publisher, Books We Love! I'm so in love with my cover ... this is book one of the Tango of Death Series; book two is Partisan Heart, (which I'll start in October - I can hardly wait... I'm so excited.) and book three is Jewish Soul.
Okay ... okay .... I'll move on. My apologies for not blogging Monday and Tuesday ... I was finishing GYPSY SPIRIT ... smile!! Okay ... okay....
I follow Jason M. Gracia's (Author, Shifting the Balance) Founder, www.Motivation123.com - as I've mentioned a time or two. Below is his article I felt necessary to share. :) Hope you like it as much as I do.
The Spanish have a proverb: Tomorrow is often the
busiest day of the week. Clever wordsmiths, those
Spaniards.
We all procrastinate. We dawdle and delay, dally and
defer. My office floor is still home to a pile of papers
that needed filing two months ago; I'm waiting for them to
stop dallying and file themselves.
Whatever the task, whatever the excuse, the tips below
will help you do today what most people put off to next
month.
1. Ask yourself, What's the holdup? People
procrastinate for many reasons. Some fear failure. Some avoid
boring jobs. Others shy away from getting tangled in a
complicated mess (i.e., my pile of papers). Knowing the cause of
the problem may open your eyes to an obvious
solution.
2. Do you need to do it? Simple question, but it's a
good one. Sometimes we put something off because it's
not important. If you don't really need to do it, free
yourself of the mental burden and drop the task from your
to-do list.
3. Ask for help. I have an ancient window mechanism
that takes the effort of a drawbridge operator to open.
Last month, unsurprisingly, it broke. Someone had to fix it,
but I was hoping that someone wasn't me. So I put it
off.
After weeks of gazing at the window without actually
doing anything, I asked a friend to help. It wasn't only
because I have the mechanical skills of an uncoordinated squid;
I knew it would get me moving.
4. Commit just five minutes. That's it--just 300
seconds. Telling yourself you only have to do something for a
sliver of time does two things. It transforms a big job into a tiny matter: Five minutes?
I can do that. And because getting started is the
hardest part, once your five minutes is up you'll often drive
right
on through to the finish.
5. Focus on the end. Thinking about how you'll feel
when you've done whatever needs to be done may motivate you
to make it happen.
I don't much like to organize, but I love to be
organized. This is what I focus on--the feeling of having
everything in its place, clean and tidy--when I need to declutter
a space. Although my pile of papers proves that I have
some work to do.
6. Just do it. Quit stalling. Quit rationalizing. Stand
up, walk to the danger zone, and get to
work.
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