A Simple Truth About Getting Things Done - Brass Tack ThinkingDo. Act. Work.

The many “get stuff done” mantras about the internet can sometimes make you feel like a complete slacker, desperately analyzing your own world to see if you actually accomplished anything today. Not that I would know anything about that.

It’s all the rage to be an ass-kicker, reminding folks that it’s not talking that counts, but doing, dammit.

What we don’t say often enough is that “doing” stuff is sometimes rather small, in tiny increments of progress that might not be noticeable to the outside world. Today, my doing might be editing a few really important paragraphs of a document. Yours might be not panicking when you walk into the kids’ room and see the toys all over the floor, leaving them for another day in favor of doing yoga for yourself or reading a book. For someone over there, doing might be a few tedious housekeeping tasks, like updating social profiles after changing jobs. Getting something done can even be not doing something that supports an old habit that isn’t useful.

Doing isn’t always about setting the world on fire.

It’s awesome to get fired up and want to build the palace, but we do that by hammering a single nail at a time, sometimes quietly and without fanfare. It’s a lesson I’ve learned myself. And every day, I see people all over the interwebz lost in a quagmire of self-flagellation on a day where they didn’t feel like they got anything done, or expressing remorse and regret in the comments of someone’s “what have you really done lately” post.

The little things do matter, even when you can’t put them on your portfolio page or your client case studies. After all, the only way we ever get to where we’re going is to keep moving toward the destination. You know where that is, and all the little bits it takes to get there.

Don’t let anyone tell you differently.