Showing posts with label Time Management. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Time Management. Show all posts

Tuesday, 22 October 2013

Time Management Tips That Truly Worked For Me 2




I promised to share some time management tips I learnt from finally publishing my first book 13 long years after I began my first of many unfinished manuscripts. Like I said here, it is extremely difficult for any person to fulfil the purpose of God for one’s life without learning how to manage time effectively. We also cannot enjoy the peak of intimacy with God in daily personal fellowship with Him if we are always falling behind in meeting up with our schedules.
You may have read a lot about how to maximise your 24 hours but you are sure to find useful tips here, especially if you are working on a time-bound project.
This is the second and final post on this topic (for now). I suggest that you read the first part here so that the examples can make more sense.


4.       Discipline Yourself and Actually Do Something: You can set all the goals in the world but they will remain idle dreams until you actually take action. I think what discourages us from starting is the fear of stopping half way with yet another ‘failed’ project. I really hope that you complete Matthew to Revelations but ask yourself; wouldn’t you be better off faltering off at the end of the gospels than never starting at all?
This point is the main factor that gives meaning to all the other points. If you don’t take action, your goals will remain unfulfilled and this may breed guilt, depression and the feeling of being a failure. It could also affect your relationship with your accountability partner who will now begin to irritate you. With time, she may just let you do what you want but of what use is that to both of you? I once heard from Bishop David Abioye that “sitting before a table is the posture of seriousness.” Since ASUU was on strike, I simply opened shop at the dining table at home. I resumed every day until the work was finished.  I didn’t hang on a cross but I kinda got the idea of what Jesus meant when He said on the cross “it is finished.” It is a different kind of high.
(Prov. 6:4-9 [KJV]) Give not sleep to thine eyes, nor slumber to thine eyelids. 5 Deliver thyself as a roe from the hand of the hunter, and as a bird from the hand of the fowler.  6 Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise: 7 Which having no guide, overseer, or ruler, 8 Provideth her meat in the summer, and gathereth her food in the harvest. 9 How long wilt thou sleep, O sluggard? when wilt thou arise out of thy sleep?
5.       Flee Distractions: They often told us in youth church not to stand and bind sexual immorality but to flee from it like one running from dear life. That should be the same attitude with distractions. You may have to turn off the radio on your smart phone because there are many people willing to ping you, send you an e-mail, chat on Facebook or thousands of other things that will take up the time you would have used otherwise. It was easier to concentrate on my work when I wasn’t thinking about how to answer a particular e-mail. You know what? When you turn on the phone later, the Milky Way wouldn’t have frozen over, the sun and the moon wouldn’t have exchanged shifts and the internet (or television) will still be where you left it.
I know that using the internet is a major issue for me. I love to surf the web and read one blog post after another, so I deactivate the Wi-Fi on my laptop when I have work to do. I don’t know how to teach you to be disciplined. I just know it is something you got to have. We need to be able to say “no” to immediate pleasures that can hinder our life’s purpose.
(2Tim 2:22 [KJV]) Flee also youthful lusts: but follow righteousness, faith, charity, peace, with them that call on the Lord out of a pure heart.
6.      Celebrate Small Victories: It has nothing to do with pride but I tried to praise myself with every tiny progress I made. I just wished that I knew this system much earlier. It was almost unbelievable when I completed the first chapter, and then the second, the third, fourth, all the way to the day I held the finished copy in my hands. Writing the draft to publishing the book took about eight months but I learnt to thank God for every stage that we completed. In the Bible reference below, you will observe how God ‘saw that it was good’ at the end of every day. He didn’t wait till EVERYTHING was over before observing a job well done.  
(Gen 1:10 [KJV]) And God called the dry land Earth; and the gathering together of the waters called He Seas: and God saw that it was good.
Note: God did not wait till it was all over before He called His works good. At the end of every day (stage), He said it was good!
7.      Pray: Sincerely, this is not an attempt to sound pious. It is simply an attempt to share what has worked and continues to work. I have learnt that time committed to God will often turn out to be time well spent especially if we do our part. I believe in this thing called grace so many times, especially when I know my will power is low, I pray for grace to be productive, to do my job like I should and to do with excellently well. After all, our sufficiency is of God and praying this way helps us to reaffirm our dependence on Him.
Like the unknown author of The Kneeling Christian said “Unless we pray aright, we cannot live aright or serve aright… prayer is omnipotent; it can do anything that God can do! When we pray, God works!
There is a special joy that comes with saying “It is finished.” Perhaps, only Jesus Christ can know the full weight of that sentence but here on earth, He has empowered us to be able to say it over and over again even as we complete our projects to His glory. Amen. 

What project are you working on or that you have you worked on? What time-management tips helped you to accomplish the projects on time?  

Friday, 18 October 2013

Time Management Tips That Truly Worked For Me 1



I promised to share some time management tips I learnt from finally publishing my first book 13 long years after I began my first of many unfinished manuscripts. Like I said here, it is extremely difficult for any person to fulfil the purpose of God for one’s life without learning how to manage time effectively. We also cannot enjoy the peak of intimacy with God in daily personal fellowship with Him if we are always falling behind in meeting up with our schedules.
Write the vision, make it plain.
You may have read a lot about how to maximise your 24 hours but you are sure to find useful tips here, especially if you are working on a time-bound project.

1.       Set Your Goals: This is like making a to-do list. Here, simplicity is very important and you need to be as specific as possible. Exactly what do you want to do and when is it expected to be done? For me, it was that the manuscript had to be complete by the end of January 2013. For you, it may be to start and complete a deep, personal study of the entire New Testament within a year.
It is important to note this goal and keep your deadline in mind. Try to break them into stages and tasks and start from the foundation up. I divided the book into likely chapters and started working my way through. For the example I started with, you may divide the New Testament into books, or better still, chapters. There are 269 chapters. Divided by 365 days, it means that you have to read at least 70% of one chapter every day. Now it doesn’t seem so daunting. Does it? Breaking it down will help you take baby steps towards the set goal.
(Hab 2:2-3 [KJV]) And the LORD answered me, and said, Write the vision, and make it plain upon tables, that he may run that readeth it. For the vision is yet for an appointed time, but at the end it shall speak, and not lie: though it tarry, wait for it; because it will surely come, it will not tarry.

2.       Have an Accountability Partner: This is another great  reason to have your own Barnabas. He can inspire you, motivate you, follow up on your progress and call your attention when you slack and take your eyes off the goal.
It is better to choose someone with whom you share similar positive value and who also believe that your goal is worth achieving. This person should be able to frankly correct you without being rude or demeaning. But it should also be someone whom you respect and value your relationship with because sometimes, it is just the thought of not letting them down that will keep you going.
I told my friend about my intention to unfailingly have a ready manuscript by January. Last day of December, all I had was an idea. My friend called me to ask how far I had gone when he heard I was on ground zero, he wasn’t pleased. He inspired and threatened and somehow, that just got me off the couch.
(Amos 3:3 [KJV]) Can two walk together, except they be agreed?
(Prov 27:17 [KJV]) Iron sharpeneth iron; so a man sharpeneth the countenance of his friend.

3.      Strike while the Iron is hot: There is a reason people keep their New Year resolutions for at least a few days into the new year- they are freshly inspired, charged and motivated. The intensity of the decision is still high and emotional capital to back it up is still in supply. Maybe you took the decision to do the study after you heard a ‘hot sermon’ on the importance of knowing The Word and you got really challenged. Take the energy you got and plough with it as soon and for as long as you can. This is because motivational speeches are sometimes like cocaine; the high can only last for a while. If you do all you can with the ‘high’, when it fizzles out, you will be encouraged with what you’ve accomplished so far. Then, it will be your work that encourages you-not you encouraging yourself to work. That was my experience. After I wrote the first pages, I was impressed! Of course, this contributed to my staying on.
If you start reading the Gospels, and gradually finish the book of Matthew, you are better off than never starting at all.

(John 9:4 [KJV]) I must work the works of him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can work.

(Eccl 11:1 [KJV]) Cast thy bread upon the waters: for thou shalt find it after many days.


 
To be continued… 

What project are you working on or have you worked on? What time-management tips helped you to accomplish the projects on time?  

Tuesday, 17 September 2013

Him Time vs. Me Time




After sliding from publishing 3 posts a week to publishing zero posts in a month, I learnt that proper time management is extremely important for a successful Christian life.
Redeeming the time for the days are evil

Many Christians sincerely wish to be closer to God and share a deeper relationship with Him. Some actually do something about this desire and go on to develop personal disciplines that help in this regard while some of us build our mansions on ‘Wishes Boulevard’; vainly expecting that one day, we will suddenly become close to God. News flash, it is not likely to happen. Like a young preacher aptly said, “If you find yourself suddenly close to God without any effort on your part; the name of that spiritual state is called death.” How very true! Intimacy with God does not happen suddenly, it requires a measure of effort from our own end.
Granted, God has made the first move by making salvation free for all through the death of Jesus, but it doesn’t end there. While God has expressed His commitment through Jesus and His permanently welcoming arms, we have to express our own commitment through the quantity and quality of time that we choose to spend with Him in fellowship and service. Yes, time- that precious gift we hardly have enough of since we have to attend to our jobs, families, friends, hobbies, and other vital needs aka watching TV, or surfing the web.
This post is not an attempt to evoke guilt or shame but the truth is that it is almost impossible to enter the fullness of God’s thoughts and purpose for our lives if we don’t spend significant time in His presence daily. How else are we going to worship Him, how are we going to study and meditate on The Word day and night like He told us to (Joshua 1:8) ?  If we don’t find time to study the word, how are we even going to know what He has prepared for them that love Him? How are we going to know the things He wants us to stop, change, adopt, or do (Habakkuk 2:1)? If we don’t know them, how are we going to do them? 
Going without quality personal fellowship is what keeps many of us as immature babies in the kingdom, and God knows we have enough babies in the Body of Christ today. Babies are members of the family and they are a delight but they are yet to enjoy the peak of the family’s essence. Isn’t that why we grieve more when a baby dies? We don’t have to remain babies; there is room for growth.
We are all saved by believing in and confessing the Lordship of Jesus but we are not all on the same level in establishing the will of God on earth. This is not because God loves some folks more than others but the Scriptures cannot be broken- God consistently seeks and uses people who make themselves available to Him (Isaiah 6:8). Are you going to be available to Him? One of the best ways to let Him know you are available is to give Him your time. 
How has your time management skills influenced your relationship with God and other areas of your life?