Action vs. Motion
How to get more out of your day with attention to action.
I work from home or a coffee shop.
OK. I work from a coffee shop. Come on; caffeine is my one vice.
Whether you work from home or your favorite legal addictive stimulate dispensary, both places provide major distractions helping us to remain busy, but not productive.
Productivity is the result I’m after.
Recently, I learned from James Clear, do not confuse motion with action. I had never thought of productivity in those simple terms.
Motion doesn’t lead to results; the action does.
Most of us stay in motion — busy work — because it makes us feel like we are doing something, but what we are doing is not in action. To me this means busy work — checking email, twitter notifications, checking our stats, answering calls, texts, and emails.
Many of us stay in the safety of motion because taking action means risking failure. For example, writing a blog post and hitting publish is an action. Hitting publish is risking something, you are putting yourself out there to be judged.
Taking action means putting ourselves out there, to be seen, where failure is always the risk.
Here are some of Clear’s examples of the distinction between motion and action.
- If I outline 20 ideas for articles I want to write, that’s motion. If I actually write and publish an article, that’s action.
- If I search for a better diet plan and read a few books on the topic, that’s motion. If I actually eat a healthy meal, that’s action.
- If I go to the gym and ask about getting a personal trainer, that’s motion. If I actually step into the workout room and start squatting, that’s action.
Clear says set up a schedule for your actions and stick to it.
Here are small changes you can make to increase your action column.
1.Stop multitasking — Instead, give laser-focused attention to what matters to you. Stay focused on the essentials instead of busying yourself with the non-essentials.
I used to be the queen of multitasking. What that means to me, now, is giving little attention to a lot of different tasks, and none of them are being done well — with purpose and meaning.
Focus on one goal at a time.
2. Clear your desk of clutter — Clear everything you don’t need for your primary task off your desk. If it is a non-essential, meaning you don’t need it to get the task at hand completed, it is potentially causing a distraction. You may glance at it, want to file it, or just the mere fact that it is sitting on your desk causes your mind to wonder. If you don’t have time to sort it into a pile or file it, at least get it off your desk, and go through it later.
Try to make later, the near future. There is nothing wrong with making a pile of “to do later.”
3. Let’s get real about your iPhone — Unless it is completely turned off or buried under a pillow four rooms away, it is a distraction.
Studies have shown even if you are not checking your phone while you work, the buzz from a text, or even when your phone lights up, will make your mind wander taking focus off your task.
4. Your morning routine starts the night before — Choose your task for the next day. Write down three to five things you plan to get done the next day. Rank them from highest to lowest priority.
In the morning, focus on the task of the highest priority. Only move on to the second goal when you’ve completed the first. Repeat.
By focusing on the most important goals you nail down your priorities and are not overwhelmed with the plethora of goals you are trying to accomplish.
When I wake up with thoughts of 100 things I need to get done for the day, I get nothing done. I spin my wheels for a good hour. When I decide the night before what one goal must get done first, I tackle that with fierce focus and get it done quickly, and have more time for non-essential goals.
5. Carve out 20% — The first 20% of your day should be spent on the tasks you wrote down the night before. Work on that task with focus for 90 minutes of your day.
For me, my most important task is usually what I’ve been putting off. That is a good sign that I need to sit down and get it done with uninterrupted focus.
You can commit to 90 minutes of your day to concentrate on getting that most crucial task complete. Think about it like this, 90 minutes is 20% of an 8-hour day, even if you do nothing for the rest of the day, you will still feel a feeling of accomplishment.
For those 90 minutes, I ignore my phone, my dog, my partner’s texts, my email, my grumbling stomach saying “give me food,” my bills, my everything, except the task at hand.
My writing output has increased ten-fold since I have been practicing this method.
6. Get sun and exercise — Sunlight and exercise boost productivity. Studies have found that sunlight helps people process faster and perform better on tests that involve mental function and memory recall. A 30- minute run also increases productivity output and helps you to focus and complete tasks more quickly. Running is action.
Be kind to yourself.
We all have days when it just isn’t happening. We are human, we all trip up, and are easily distracted some days more than others. That’s OK, forgive yourself, move on, and try to have a more productive day tomorrow.
When we practice focused attention and not giving into distraction, we are exercising the prefrontal cortex, making it easier to focus in the days to come.
Jessica is a writer, an online entrepreneur, and a recovering type-A personality. She lives in Los Angeles with her extrovert daughter, two dogs, and two cats.






