Simplify It Sunday

Just taking a breather here and thought Iโd share some thoughts as I looked at my crazy Inbox this weekend. I switched to Gmail last year and things just keep moving down as they come in, until they turn the corner and head into the โolderโ page (ie: Siberia). Where they get forgotten. So yesterday, I deleted a few messages. As in, a few hundred messages. I donโt even recall what many of them were about, or why I was saving them, but invariably a few likely got tossed that I probably should have answered. Drat.
Thereโs a concept Iโve been hearing about called declaring โbankruptcyโ. Itโs not about the global financial meltdown, but itโs about preventing another kind of meltdown by simply starting back again from zero, a blank slate. Itโs an interesting idea and itโs nice to do a bit of spring cleaning now and then, even though spring is a few months away, unfortunately. (Although it did give me an excuse to buy a killer-stylinโ new overcoat for winter last Wednesday.)
Weโre all so busy these days and folks who have blogs or who work online, like yours truly, get swamped. So I prefer to answer your questions in the comments of the blog, since I can keep it all rounded-up and focused there (I mustโve been a herding dog in my past life) and the comments often turn into an interesting discussion forum. So if you pose a question about a blog post or recipe on Twitter or Facebook, Iโm not likely to answer it there just because I canโt keep track of all of them. (Often the question may have already been answered in the comments on the site, as well.)
Iโve been using Twitter quite a bit since it keeps me connected and I donโt have to click a million buttons to open, answer, and then delete. Itโs just bing-bang. Due to the cavalcade of stuff that rolls in via Twitterific, which I use to manage my Twitterstream, if I donโt answer you, that doesnโt mean I donโt like you; it just means that Iโm either unavailable, or am busy working and canโt. I try to see and read it all, but things just stream through like a conversation and sometimes Iโll jump in, and sometimes I wonโt. Just like everyone else on Twitter. Thatโs just the nature of Twitter; itโs meant to be spontaneous. If you ask something and donโt get an answer, Iโm working on a writing project, or The Worldโs Best Blog Post (or, more likely, reading FAILblog), so thatโs why.
Similarly with Facebook. Iโve been posting links over on my Facebook page and thereโs been some great discussions happening there. Often itโs topics that fall outside of the blog; perhaps they are political or celebrity scandals, freaky stuff or whatever. I jump in there as well and like reading the conversations that develop.
So Iโve been looking into ways to simply my workflow and am interested in hearing any of yours. A few are below, including one person who quit e-mail once and for all. Yikes.
Links
How and Why I Ditched My Inbox (Zen Habits)
Empty Your Inbox (MacWorld)
So Long, and Thanks for All the Fish (Lifehacker)
Smart Ways to Work (Odette Pollar)
The Anti-Social World of Social Media (The Punch)
How Successfuly Writers E-mail (Amateur Gourmet)
E-Mail Bankruptcy (Worker Bees Blog)
What to Expect If You Follow Me on Twitter (Wil Wheaton)
How to Get Started on Twitter (Food Blog Alliance)







