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Senin, 31 Januari 2011

Competition

well friends !!
i must tell it to you all,,

saya harus menceritakan pengalaman hari ini,,

well,hari ini tegang banget,kepala pusing,
dari kepusinganku ini,ternyata aku lolos 6 besar untuk presentasi ,,
dan akan di lanjutkan untuk debat setelah ishoma,

mmm,, ternyata dari 6 peserta yang masuk tahap final,,

SMPN 1 Paguyangan
SMPN 1 Bumiayu
SMPN 3 Bumiayu  Lolos cuyy ,, ini gokil banget,, 
sekolah yang selalu berdekatan ini lolos semua,,bahkan menyisihkan pesaing hebat dari SMPN 2 Brebes yang notabene nya berstatus RSBI di kalahkan sekolah SSN,,
mm ini penurunan derajat pengetahuan sekolah RSBI ,,


mmm,, ku jelasin setelah selesai debat yak?
karena aku mau ishoma dulu ,,  byeee

Rabu, 05 Januari 2011

Time Management For Creative People Part.2 "Prioritise work that is ‘important but not urgent’"

 

A couple of years ago, I was facing a brick wall. I was in the second year of a part-time Masters degree that was essential for my business. I was invited to edit an issue of Magma, one of the top poetry magazines in the UK as a poet, this was a chance I couldnt turn down. I was also getting married, which took a fair amount of preparation too and that was one opportunity I was
definitely not turning down! Meanwhile, I somehow had to keep my business going, keep my clients happy and fund all these extra-curricular activities.

As if that werent enough, I discovered this new phenomenon called blogging or rather, discovered that people were using it to spread their ideas and promote their businesses, rather
than just to write about their cats breakfast menu. It looked like a perfect medium for me I loved
writing, I had ideas I wanted to get into circulation, and I loved connecting with new people. But where was I going to find the time?

I’d already made a reluctant deal with myself to put my poetry-writing ‘on-hold’ until the end of
the MA (on condition that I resumed afterwards, which I’m now doing with pleasure). But I was still faced with the seemingly impossible task of finding quality, focused time, away from interruptions,
to write my essays, read poetry submissions with the care they deserved, and start a blog. After scanning my diary and surveying the tasks in hand, I was faced with a depressing conclusion.

I was going to have to get up early.
There was simply no other time in my schedule or not the quiet, uninterrupted time I needed for
my work, without the intrusion of phone calls, e-mails, meetings and classes. I had never considered myself one of natures early risers, and working from home much of the time had
allowed me the luxury of avoiding early starts for commuting. On a good day I’d be up by 7.30, on
a bad day it was closer to 8.30. Still time to get a reasonable amount of work done by starting at
9.00 but I was faced with an unreasonable amount of work, so drastic action was called for.

My new start time became 6.30am. If you want to know how I managed this, read Steve Pavlinas excellent post How to become an early riser. Here, I’m more concerned with the effect since making the change, I’ve edited a postbag of 2,500 poems into Magma issue 34,  achieved a distinction in my Masters, and created the Wishful Thinking blog which has transformed my business and opened up many new creative avenues for me to explore. I’ve also written some poems I’m pleased with (at the moment, anyway) and which are gradually making it into
publication. Most importantly of all, I made it to the wedding on time!

I’m not listing the above to blow my own trumpet, but to illustrate the value of ring-fencing time
for your own creative work, in the midst of more urgent demands. It would have been easy for me
to justify turning down the poetry magazine because I was too busy. It would have been even easier to put off starting the blog until I had more time. I could even have reasoned my way into
stopping or deferring the Masters. But the thing is, there will always be something ‘urgent’ taking
my attention away from my own creative initiatives. Yet when I look back over the last couple of
years, the time when I’ve created most value, for myself and my clients, has been those first hours
of the day I’ve spent writing blog posts, essays, seminars and poems. Its the creative wellspring that feeds into all the coaching, training, presenting and consulting I do when I’m face-to-face
with clients.






Enough about me. How can you find time to achieve your creative ambitions?

Prioritise work that is ‘important but not urgent’

In his book The Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, Stephen Covey classifies work tasks according to whether they are important or urgent.

Covey points out that many of us spend too much time on tasks that are urgent and important
(the red square in the diagram) in other words, staving off emergencies by rushing around to
solve problems or responding to others’ demands at short notice. Sometimes this is unavoidable
‘deadline magic’ can spur us on to feats of creative production we wouldnt otherwise attempt. This can be an exciting and productive experience but its up to you whether you want to work
like this most of the time. The example of the computer games industry where extended
‘crunch’ times can mean endless overtime to meet a deadline suggests that prolonged deadline magic can turn into deadline misery, with a significant impact on morale and efficiency.

Coveys solution is to prioritise work that is important but not urgent (the blue square in the diagram). Though this is hard to do on any given day, it is the only way to ensure you are making progress towards your own goals and dreams, instead of merely reacting to what other people
throw at you. And over time, the more you are dealing with important things before they become
urgent, the fewer ‘urgent and important’ tasks you will have to deal with.

The most obvious way to do this is to work on your own projects first every day, even if its only
for half an hour. Whatever interruptions come along later, you will at least have the satisfaction of having made some progress towards your own goals.

Its obviously not just a question of time you also need to ring-fence your attention so that you can devote your full attention to your creative work, without being knocked off course by distractions. The next chapter will look at how some highly creative people have achieved this,
and what you can learn from them.