When one lives in order, one cannot imagine a disordered life. Although it took a century to tidy up the bedroom and wardrobe, in the end it slowly returns to old habits. Running out of the room, he throws something into the drawer, vowing to put it in its rightful place later. Coming home from school, children tend to throw their clothes on the bottom of the closet or on the floor instead of hanging them. Gradually, the books are no longer arranged or put in their place. Learning to be tidy is one thing, but staying tidy is a completely different kettle of fish.
Steps
Step 1. Time is everything
We know that time is money, but it is of fundamental importance to be sure that you know how to organize your time appropriately. The best way to find time is to treat it as if it were a budget. You have to take into account what you have, what you need and what you want. So, you have to take a calendar and initially fill it with all the necessities and then mark and distribute the time for the things you want and need to do and finally add other tasks.
Step 2. The Task Managers
For personal or professional use, there are many task managers, some very useful for a fee such as BaseCamp and Active Collab, who remember what to do, when to do it and above all who help you stay sane. It takes some time to get used to, but once done, it becomes much more tidy
Step 3. Companion of responsibility
It's easy to lose control and organization at the same time. It doesn't matter if you are motivated and if you want to move forward, anyone can lose the set goals at hand and get out of the way, or go back to being messy. One way to avoid this is to have someone or something remind us of their plans or tasks. The ideal would be to have a business partner, friend, family member or anyone who wants to fill the role of the person who makes us feel responsible.
Step 4. Writing down everywhere and always is a must
Who hasn't happened to have a brilliant idea, or hear something useful or remember something that needs to be done later? If you don't make a note, right then and there, it will most likely be forgotten. Put simply, you have to keep something to make a note that you can slip into your pocket. There are many phones that are perfect for jotting down something or for recording voice notes. If you prefer pen and paper, you need to get a cheap notebook the size of a wallet and keep it with you at all times. It's amazing how sometimes even a folded piece of paper in your wallet does its duty better than memory
Step 5. Think, write, say:
start blogging to be more orderly. If you follow a process of learning, writing and doing, you will remember something at least 10 times more easily than someone who simply has an idea or who reads an article. Try to keep the habit of using bookmarks as a kind of short-term memory, with which you can jot down interesting things, collect thoughts, pin them, share them in a blog and eventually delete them. A great tool for pinning something is Delicious. Once you've pinned something, you can access it from any browser on the internet, and if you forget it, you just have to search for your account and it's there, like a second memory! Br>