I'm kind of surprised to see Oliver Burkeman mentioned so far down in the comments, but from personal experience this is the right thinking process.
What has worked well for me is Mark Forster's AutoFocus method, which is very similar (one long list where you pick what you feel like doing and re-enter if the task is not finished). This article explains it best: https://www.artofmanliness.com/character/behavior/autofocus-...
One benefit that I appreciated the most is that it allows you to trust yourself and your feelings. It puts you in touch with your inner self. it's kind of subtle in the sense that you only realize it after using the system for a few weeks.
Most existing time and work management systems work off of the assumption that you cannot trust yourself and that you're a lazy person or a procrastinator.
What has worked well for me is Mark Forster's AutoFocus method, which is very similar (one long list where you pick what you feel like doing and re-enter if the task is not finished). This article explains it best: https://www.artofmanliness.com/character/behavior/autofocus-...
One benefit that I appreciated the most is that it allows you to trust yourself and your feelings. It puts you in touch with your inner self. it's kind of subtle in the sense that you only realize it after using the system for a few weeks.
Most existing time and work management systems work off of the assumption that you cannot trust yourself and that you're a lazy person or a procrastinator.