![]() The developer is responsive in my experience. You can not drag and drop on the Android app.Īny big work is best done with less frustration and eyestrain, on the desktop version.įor instance, 'Reorganizing' projects and folders as the anticipated work flow morphes into larger projects, and new divisions of strategic interest.Īpp DEVELOPMENT As the App expands, it regularly adds sensible features. Good move.īoth are useful, but functionality differs. I bought 'Premium' when it was a lifetime one time buy. The UNpaid version was quite useless for me, but maybe a starting point for minimal needs. Now at 947 projects in 443 Folders, I've got so much planning invested in it that switching is daunting. Not without challenges for super user, but excellent for starters and mid level, certainly. Regardless, "Chaos Control GTD" was hands down the best available at the time. Never found that, but CC added methods that have a work around that, using 'contexts', and 'favorites' Preferably something with the same 'Folder Heirarchy' as Windows, etc. Tried a bunch of other to do lists etc, but too limited. We’ll get through this together.Yes, I've been a powered user of CHAOS CONTROL GTD since about 2015 ish.Ī sometimes love hate relationship, but regardless of bumps, I highly recommend it. Stay healthy, stay well, and stay focused. When the world is in chaos, control what you can. So, focus your energy there, even if it seems like very little. And it is the first step in making the most of our current circumstances. It is the first step in moving from a reactive life to a proactive one. It is an essential strategy for each of us going forward. We can still decide to make the most of each day in front of us.Ĭontrolling what you can might not seem like much, but it’s something.Īctually, it’s a lot more than something. If you are a man or woman of faith, you can choose to rely upon it during this time. We can choose kind words in conversations. We can always control our attitude and our response to the people and events around us. We can choose what we watch and listen to, and we can control what time we turn off the television at night. We can make our bed in the morning, we can choose to reset our home in the evening. We can still choose to get ready in the morning for the day ahead. We can still control what time we wake up in the morning. Even if our usual day-to-day opportunities have been taken from us by another, there is still much we can control. But that doesn’t mean we’ve lost all ability to maintain control over our lives. We’ve all been reminded that we are not in ultimate control of the universe. So how do we respond when the world is in chaos? How do we begin to move forward?įor one, we take back control of what we can control-even in the smallest of ways. The world, it feels, has spun into chaos. We, of course, never had as much control over our lives and the world as we thought we did, but still, it is hard to lose the little that we had. A tiny virus, invisible to the naked eye, has brought the world to a screeching halt, disrupting everything in its path-even life as normal. ![]() And there are seasons and circumstances that remind us of that fact.Ī natural disaster, a terminal diagnosis, a wayward son, an unexpected layoff… each of those come to mind as examples.Īt this current moment in time, almost everyone in the world, simultaneously, is being confronted with the reality of lost control through the spread of a virus. There are times in our lives when we are confronted with the reality that we are not in control of the world around us.Īs hard as we try, and as much as we’d like to think we’re in control, the reality is, we are not.
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