The screen glowed, a testament to hours. You’d just spent your Sunday afternoon, the autumn light fading outside, painstakingly migrating tasks from Notion to Asana. Dragging, dropping, color-coding every tag with meticulous precision. You assigned 22 sub-tasks to a single project, created 2 custom fields, and even configured 42 automations. A deep, almost spiritual sense of accomplishment settled over you, the kind that whispers, ‘Finally, this week, everything will be perfect.’ Then Monday arrived. And you reached for a beat-up notebook, a single pen, and started scribbling.
It’s a bizarre ritual, isn’t it? This endless quest for the ultimate productivity system, the one magical app that will finally align the stars and make us do the work we’re meant to do. My friend, Reese B.-L., an algorithm auditor by trade, once told me about observing data flows. ‘The most complex systems,’ he mused over a lukewarm coffee, ‘are often the least efficient. They create their own overhead.’ He sees it in code; I see it in our to-do lists. We spend more time managing our management tools than actually, you know, doing the thing we’re supposed to be managing. It’s a truth I’ve wrestled with for years, probably 12 or 22 of them, watching myself fall into the same trap over and over.
I remember a project, years ago, that felt overwhelming. A client needed a set of custom assets, and my initial reaction wasn’t to design; it was to build a Trello board with 200+ cards, each with its own checklist. I spent two days on that Trello board. Two days! By the time I was ‘ready’ to start the actual design, the deadline felt closer, the pressure greater, and the energy I *should* have had for creation was utterly depleted. It was a spectacular waste of 2 valuable days. A classic case of confusing motion with progress. We believe these complex systems give us control, but often, they are just sophisticated forms of procrastination, giving us the *feeling* of control over work without the discomfort of actually doing it. They’re a comfortable, digital blanket protecting us from the cold reality of effort.
Trello Board
Actual Work
This isn’t to say all organization is bad. Not at all. A simple, reliable process can be a bedrock. Think about a company that prioritizes straightforwardness, like Sira Print with their transparent approach to creating custom stickers. There’s no labyrinth of options or opaque pricing; you know what you’re getting, and the process is clear. That directness? It’s what we need in our own workflows. It’s a clean interface to work, not an intricate puzzle to solve before you even begin.
And yet, I find myself, even after all these years, occasionally lured back. Just last week, I downloaded another new app, telling myself *this one* would be different. It had a sleek interface, promising to integrate my calendar, my notes, my emails, even my grocery list – all in 2 clicks. For about 42 minutes, I felt the familiar rush of potential, the intoxicating belief that I was finally ‘getting it.’ Then my phone battery died, and the entire edifice of my new perfect system crumbled. The reliance on complex tech to manage simple tasks often means we’re building on sand.
Is our pursuit of the ‘perfect system’ truly about productivity, or about avoiding the discomfort of decision?
We’re trying to externalize internal discipline. The deep meaning here is often missed: the search for a perfect system is a response to overwhelming workloads, but it misdiagnoses an external problem (too much work, too many meetings, too many vague requests) as an internal one (not organized enough). We look inward for a solution to an outward pressure. It’s like trying to fix a leaky roof by rearranging the furniture inside the house. The rain still comes. The tasks still pile up. The only difference is now your living room is perfectly color-coded.
System Entropy
Friction
Time Sink
What truly happened the moment you gave up on your last elaborate system? For many, it wasn’t a failure of willpower. It was a quiet rebellion. A realization that the energy required to maintain the system was far greater than the energy it supposedly saved. Reese calls it ‘system entropy.’ The more variables, the more friction. A beautiful spreadsheet with 1,222 cells looks impressive, but if it takes an hour to update every day, is it really serving you? Or are you serving it?
I’ve tried them all, believe me. GTD, Bullet Journal, Kanban boards with 22 stages. Each promised liberation, and each delivered a different flavor of digital purgatory. I’d spend entire afternoons customizing dashboards, building intricate task dependencies, creating elaborate tagging structures. The irony, of course, is that during those hours, I could have *actually done* half the tasks I was trying to organize. It’s the ultimate form of productive-looking procrastination. We get the dopamine hit of ‘doing something’ without ever confronting the actual work. It’s the digital equivalent of cleaning your desk for an entire morning instead of writing the report that’s due.
I used to obsessively back up every file, every note, every system. Then my main hard drive failed – for the second time in 2 years. After a brief panic, I justβ¦ started over. The ‘off and on again’ approach. What was truly essential resurfaced naturally. The rest? It wasn’t that important anyway. This ‘reset’ helped me realize that the most robust systems are often the ones you can recreate in 2 minutes with basic tools.
