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What Do You Want to Make Real in the World?
Mar 29
Written By [36]Anna Havron
Often the question that drives peoples initial interest in productivity is:
“How am I going to get everything done?”
For me, at least, that was true: I got to a point where my life was too
complicated for me to manage it without a productivity system. And so I learned
about systems for managing time and information and tasks and goals and
projects.
These systems have allowed me to get a lot more done, than I could have without
them.
But the danger is that we might too easily substitute getting things done —
checking off tasks, chores, projects — for living a life of depth and
resonance.
For example, I want to take a couple of hours [37]for an adventure to visit a
heron rookery nearby, so I can see dozens of Great Blue herons nesting.
But nesting season for herons coincides with my busiest time of the year.
If I tell myself that I need to get everything done before I take time to see
this, nesting season will be over. I will miss the experience of seeing them.
(And I still wont get everything done; I can always think of more that I would
like to have done, than I can actually do.)
Stop Asking Yourself How Youll Get Everything Done
Most productivity and organizational systems are geared toward the world of
work, paid or unpaid.
Few talk about managing your time so that you can pursue important
relationships and activities that feed your spirit, but not your bank account.
(Laura Vanderkams recent book, Tranquility by Tuesday, is one exception to
this.)
But what we call “leisure activities,” non-work or chore activities,
non-productive activities in the economic sense, are the very activities you
might look back on as the most important to cultivating a well-lived life: a
life where youve had rich relationships, where youve taken time to create
things that gave you pleasure to create, where youve taken time to contribute
your energy and efforts to make this world a better place.
Sometimes the belief that you must finish everything on the list, whether its
paid work tasks or chores around the house, robs you of leisure time: “But I
cant stop working until I get everything done!”
Part of the solution for this is using time management techniques such as [38]
paying yourself first.
But part of it is also reframing the question.
Ask Instead: What Do You Want to Make Real in the World?
What if, instead of asking yourself, “What do I need to get done,” you ask
yourself: “What do I want to make real, in this world?”
What do you want to make real?
What do you want to bring from your imagination, into real life?
What do you want to make real, that you can experience? Hiking the Appalachian
Trail from Georgia to Maine? Having clean socks on a predictable basis
(seriously, that is one of mine)? (Next level: having clean socks on a regular
basis, while you are hiking the Appalachian Trail.)
What do you want to make real that other people can enjoy or use — learning to
play music, starting a non-profit program, creating a useful app?
What do you want to make real, that makes this world a better place: provide
[39]housing for purple martins so they can keep migrating to North America;
provide housing for human beings, so all can live with dignity?
We will all have different things that we deeply want to become real, in this
world. We will all have different experiences and accomplishments that we hope
to look back on, at the end of a well-lived life.
I personally believe that if everyone took one thing they wanted to see changed
in this world, and worked toward making that one thing real; that we would all
be much better off.
Making Things Real in the World Can Take a Lot of Effort; or, Almost No Effort
at All
Lately my key productivity question to myself is: what do I want to make real,
in this world?
What do I want to make real, today?
This can be very small! The other day what I most wanted to make real, was some
clean socks. (Doing the laundry, a care task I dislike, is much more satisfying
for me when I cheer myself on, saying, “You go, Anna, giving yourself clean
socks, good for you!”)
I also want to write a book, which is a lot more work than throwing a load of
wash into a machine.
To make my book real in the world, Im going to have to put in consistent
thought and effort over time. The same is true for making things real like
starting your own business, learning a trade, socializing a dog to become a
beloved part of the family.
But some things that are important to you, and that bring you a lot of joy, you
can make real without much trouble at all.
Making Things Real is About Responding to Opportunities
When I was a child, I lived in the Southwest of the U.S., and in northern New
England: places where cherry blossom trees dont grow.
Every year during the spring I would see the Cherry Blossom Festival pictures
in Washington, DC, and I thought that those trees looked like blooming clouds,
banks of flowering clouds, on the banks of the Potomac. I dreamed of seeing
them in real life.
It wasnt until my thirties that I got to experience the Cherry Blossom
Festival in Washington, DC, in real life rather than in my imagination.
That memory of walking under hundreds of flowering cherry trees, with dark rain
clouds overhead playing up the lightness of those short-lived blossoms, remains
one of the most vividly piercing things I have ever experienced.
By that time, we lived in an area where cherry trees could grow. However, our
house already had such a large old maple shading the yard that we couldnt
plant other trees.
One day, a storm came and toppled our maple tree.
I was saddened to see it go, but realized that now our small yard had enough
sun and space to plant a Yoshino cherry tree, just like the ones in Washington,
DC.
And so we did.
cherry blossom branches with a blue sky behind them
Here it is!
It took less than a day to plant it. That was fourteen years ago.
Now, it is full grown.
I can see blossoming branches from my bedroom window, nodding in the breezes,
with birds flying in and out of them, and wild solitary bees burrowing into the
blossoms. Yoshino cherry trees bloom even before dandelions bloom.
Being able to see the cherry blossoms each spring, from a flowering tree in our
own yard, from my bedroom window no less, is — for me — one of the best things
I have ever made real in the world.
And it was hardly any work at all.
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Copy and share - [40]the link is here. Never miss a post from annahavron.com!
[41]Subscribe here to get blog posts via email.
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References
Vanderkam, L. (2022) Tranquility by Tuesday: 9 ways to calm the chaos and make
time for what matters. New York: Portfolio.
Byington, C. (2016) Purple Martins: The Bird That Relies on Human-Built Nests,
Cool Green Science, 12 September. Available at: https://blog.nature.org/2016/09
/12/purple-martins-the-bird-that-relies-on-human-built-nests/ (Accessed: 28
March 2023).
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