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\nAbout the\xa0book
\nAny given day brings a never-ending list of things to do. There\u2019s the work thing, the catch-up thing, the laundry thing, the creative thing, the exercise thing, the family thing, the thing we don\u2019t want to do, the thing we\u2019ve been putting off (despite it being the most important thing). Even on days where we get a lot done, the thing left undone can leave us feeling guilty, anxious, or disappointed.
\nAfter five years of searching for the secret to productivity, Madeleine Dore discovered there isn\u2019t one. Instead, we\u2019re being set up to fail. I Didn\u2019t Do The Thing Today is the inspiring call to take productivity off its pedestal\u200a\u2014\u200aby dismantling our comparison to others, aspirational routines, and the unrealistic notions of what can be done in a day, we can finally embrace the joyful messiness and unpredictability of life.
\nFor anyone who has ever felt the pressure to do more, be more, achieve more, this antidote to our doing-obsession is the permission slip we all need to find our own way.
\nSource: https://extraordinaryroutines.com/book
\nAbout the\xa0author
\nMadeleine Dore is a writer and interviewer exploring how we can broaden the definition of a day well spent. For the past five years, Madeleine has been asking creative thinkers how they navigate their days on her popular blog Extraordinary Routines and podcast Routines & Ruts.
\nShe has contributed columns and features to Sunday Life, BBC WorkLife, ArtsHub, 99u, Womankind, Kill Your Darlings, The Design Files, ABC Life and more. Madeleine regularly conducts life experiments and hosts events to explore how creativity isn\u2019t just something we do, but how we approach our lives.
\nSource: https://extraordinaryroutines.com/about
\nBig idea #1\u200a\u2014\u200aBe a day\xa0artist
\nOne of the underlying ideas is this concept of being a \u2018day artist\u2019, or seeing each day as a work of art. Being creative, rather than doing creativity in how we live. This means being creative with the elements of a day, even when that day doesn\u2019t go to plan.
\nThere\u2019s a nice quote in the book from Helena Bonham Carter that says;
\n\u201cEverything in life is art. What you do, how you dress, the way you love someone and how you talk, your smile and your personality, what you believe in and all your dreams, the way you drink your tea, how you decorate your home, or party\xa0,your grocery list, the food you make, how your writing looks, the way you feel. Life is art.\u201d\n
It\u2019s a great reminder that we get to choose how to live. It\u2019s quite a freeing idea. Taking this approach involves a little bit more play, and wonder and curiosity.\xa0
\nMaybe you don\u2019t start the day by \u2018eating the frog\u2019 or doing the most unpleasant thing first, but maybe you start the day with something that\u2019s pure pleasure instead. There\u2019s a fantastic example in the book, about a chef who starts the day with a bowl of porridge with a dollop of clotted cream on top, along with some brown sugar, and he just thinks that\u2019s the best way to start the day because by breakfast, he\u2019s already won the day! A perfect example of prioritizing delight over dread.
\nBeing a day artist might mean making changes to your environment, having a corner of a room dedicated to reading, for example. It doesn\u2019t need to be that you need lots of extra space, but maybe you just use your space differently. There\u2019s example in the book from Austin Kleon, who talks about having a really clear, crisp, clean work area with his computer where he writes, but then a really messy desk, which is where he does all his messy collage work.
\nIt means letting go of expectations, or at least holding them much more lightly and letting things surprise us, which can then allow us to explore what we really want, not just what we think we \u201cshould\u201d be doing.
\nNow, we can\u2019t seek constant novelty in life, but we can be much more attuned to it and leave space for surprise, even if it\u2019s just for an hour or 10 minutes in our day.
\nBig idea #2\u200a\u2014\u200aEmbrace the\xa0wobble
\nThere\u2019s lots of wobbling in our days. Maybe something takes longer than planned, or there\u2019s a distraction, an interruption, or a drama. Whatever it might be, embracing the wobble means that we might need to find \u2018puddles\u2019 of time, rather than needing perfect blocks of uninterrupted time in order to get things done. It\u2019s more about self-awareness, than self-regulation, which a lot of productivity guidance can be a bit heavy on.
\nWobbling is a constant adjustment, we\u2019re constantly twisting and turning and balancing and bumping into things. But berating ourselves for our inconsistency takes up the precious time that we\u2019re telling ourselves off for wasting in the first place. There is no dress rehearsal in life, this is it.
\nMaybe we need to stop letting ambition get in our way. Sometimes ambition can be a good thing, but sometimes it can be a pursuit of recognition from others, rather than a focus on doing things that we want to do. It\u2019s obviously not all bad, but maybe being more micro-ambitious, a term that she took from the wonderful Tim Minchin, is a healthier and more flexible approach that allows us to focus in what\u2019s in front of us, in the present instead of what\u2019s next.
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\nBig idea #3\u200a\u2014\u200aKindness over busy-ness
\nNone of us need telling twice about the modern scourge of busy-ness. It\u2019s such a barrier to connection and it\u2019s a fast track to burnout.
\nKindness, Madeleine says, is the antidote to burnout. Kindness with ourselves and with others. Whether that\u2019s a chat with the person serving you at the post office, or making a donation to charity, or texting a friend to say hi, incorporating a bit more kindness into our days, rather than busy-ness, can be a nice way of slowing down and remembering what\u2019s important.
\nKindness extends to ourselves by knowing that rest is not a bad thing. Hobbies don\u2019t need to be a side-hustles, and we can challenge all the things we tell ourselves that we should do. Otherwise it\u2019s easy to find ourselves too busy to actually enjoy life. There\u2019s a really nice analogy in the book of being like a sponge. Sometimes we\u2019re in absorption mode soaking up, resting, learning, taking in knowledge etc, but too long in absorb mode will leave us kind of sodden and a bit soggy and wet. So we need to be squeezed. We need a bit of pressure to balance us out.
\nUltimately, Madeline says;
\n\u201cMaybe we can\u2019t expect to enjoy every day, but we can find it endearing. When we reach the end of the day, instead of berating ourselves, what we did or didn\u2019t do, we can be charmed by the ordinary moments of living and what our days can bring.\u201d\n
Which I think is a rather nice way of thinking about life.
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