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Feeling This Thing Out

Two HandsI’m still a newbie when it comes to this weblog thing, so I’ve been thinking about what type of stuff I would write about. Since I really enjoy reading, I figured a Reading List might be in order. So, I’ve posted a few comments about some books that I’ve been reading recently: The E-Myth Revisited and Getting Things Done. They aren’t all going to be business books, but that’s what I’ve been reading the most of recently.

Of course, this opens up a whole different train of thought, such as movies and other interests that I have. Palm OS Devices have been such a large part of my life since 1997 and I have plenty of outlets for that passion, but there’s other passions that I have such as movies, food, etc. and I’m not quite sure what to do with it all. For example, I signed up for NetFlix in November 2002 and since then I’ve rated over 558 movies, have 106 movies in my on-line queue and have watched approximately 35 movies since then. Those movies include the first two and a half seasons of The Sopranos (12 1-hour episodes each season) and as if that wasn’t enough, I’m not talking about the fact that I usually watch each movie twice because I want to hear the director’s commentary the second time. Wow, this is sounding more like a support group confession than a little “ditty” about a hobby. :)

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Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity by David Allen

"Getting Things Done" by David Allen

"Getting Things Done" by David Allen

There’s an old Louisiana saying, ‘When you’re up to your ass in alligators is when you remember you were supposed to drain the swamp.’ 2002 was my year of the alligator and luckily Tony Ching of the San Francisco Palm Users Group recommended this book to me. What struck me by his recommendation was not the level of excitement he had about the book (like my excitement over The E-Myth Revisited), but rather the Zen like calm he had when discussing it.

David Allen is president of David Allen & Co. and has more than twenty years’ experience as a management consultant, executive coach, and educator. He has been a keynote speaker and productivity facilitator for organizations such as Oracle, L. L. Bean, Microsoft, Lockheed, and the World Bank.His work has been featured in Fast Company, Fortune, and many other publications. With a background like that I was really expecting a dry and very business like book. However, in the first chapter he referrs to “flow,” and to reach a state where your mental state is a “mind like water,” I knew that this was going to be a different kind of book.

That is not to say that just because you throw in a few Eastern philosophies you have a good book. Obviously, you have to have real-world solutions and not just another collection of buzz words and this book delivers. The premise of the book is that you have to have a system that works irregardless of what technology you use. In other words, a new piece of software, or a new type of binder isn’t going to do it. You need a fool-proof system that can adapt as you need to.

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