The One List That Replaced All My Apps
I had eleven productivity apps and got nothing done. Then I deleted them all for a single plain-text list — and finally started finishing things.
6 articles in this topic
I had eleven productivity apps and got nothing done. Then I deleted them all for a single plain-text list — and finally started finishing things.
I spent two years perfecting my morning routine. The endless tweaking turned out to be the most elaborate procrastination of my life.
The five-question test I use before subscribing to anything — and the embarrassing math on the tools I never opened twice.
I cut my daily list in half expecting to fall behind. Instead I finished more, finished better, and stopped feeling like I was drowning.
I thought I was getting organized. I was actually procrastinating with extra steps — and tool-hopping was the whole disease.
I added up what I was paying for AI tools and felt sick. Half of them I'd opened twice. Here's how I cut the bloat without cutting the value.