• themeatbridge
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    607 months ago

    Like you build the jenga tower so that it falls down in the direction of doing the dishes.

    • @[email protected]
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      467 months ago

      You look at the dishes, comprehend how you would do them if you did, build a plan, then put it in the back of your mind and go about your day.

      • @thebeardedpotato
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        147 months ago

        This describes my pea brain to the letter.

        Like once I figure out how to do a thing, I no longer have anything interest in doing the thing.

        • @[email protected]
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          117 months ago

          it’s because solving the challenge of how to do it is fun and interesting whereas actually putting forth the effort in doing it sounds like work and is not fun.

        • @darelik
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          87 months ago

          Yes that is because the “how to do it” has been processed and therefore it’s as good as done.

    • lemmyng
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      147 months ago

      Structure like a skeleton. Gives you the rough shape, but you have some freedom to arrange the squishy bits hanging off it.

      • themeatbridge
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        27 months ago

        If I could do it myself, I’d make some of the bits more or less squishy.

    • @[email protected]
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      37 months ago

      For me, this might mean studying with the knowledge that when I get antsy and need to task switch, I can do the dishes instead. It feels like a weird form of circuit training

    • @Addv4
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      27 months ago

      Or you start out with folding clothes, then start putting them away, get distracted by the dishes or cleaning up the bathroom, and start on that other chore. The key is to eventually get back to the original (easier said than done), but even if you didn’t really get it done quickly, you often put yourself in the mindset of cleaning, which helps on its own.

      • themeatbridge
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        27 months ago

        Oof, thinking about all the chores I could do right now is exhausting. I think I’m going to lie down and read tvtropes for the next 6 hours.

        • @Addv4
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          27 months ago

          Nah, try forcing yourself to start one, and decide you’re going to take a break from it for “*just a minute” *™ by doing another chore, and be amazed by how many chores you get done avoiding the first one. Bonus points if the first chore isn’t even that bad.