My plan was a very simple one:
Make tea.
Write an article.
Make lunch.
If you prefer a visual representation, here’s my “planned route”:
What could go wrong?
This is what actually happened:
I made tea.
I noticed that the water wasn’t going down the sink, so I thought I’d clear the drain.
Then I thought, I might as well do the other drain while I’m at it.
I managed to get some “gunk” on the wall, and a skirting board, so I had to wash that all off.
Unfortunately, I too acquired some “gunk”, on my clothes, so I decided to get changed.
I thought, while I’m doing that, I might as well have a shower too.
After all that, I was ready for lunch.
And once again, here is a visual representation of it. This is the actual route I took:
Sometimes the “domino effect”, as I call it, is for a useful outcome. For example, it might look like this:
Idea: write an article on X.
Research X.
Realise that the article on X would make more sense if I wrote an article on Y first, so that I could refer to it in my article about X.
Research Y….
Is this sort of thing merely one elaborate displacement activity, to put off the act of writing? I don’t think so.
Except that, in writing this article, I still haven’t written the one I’d intended to several hours ago!
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