The Four Circles of Creative Hell [comic]

The Four Circles of Creative Hell [comic]

Even the notoriously uninhibited creatives can benefit from time tracking – be it for billing their clients or improving their time management skills. But they have to be careful not to mix up time and results. You can’t force creativity – and there is nothing worse for the artist than a clock mercilessly ticking away.

Initial (over)excitement about being productive

This phase is characterised by excitement over the perceivably positive activity of time tracking, as well as overenthusiastic appreciation of any aesthetic solutions offered by the application.

The Shutdown

If you fail to heed the warnings and push past the 20 minute mark, you’ll soon enter productivity twilight zone

Continued fixation on process over substance

For people with a wandering mind, the ticking timer might cause a false perspective that measuring time is more important than measuring results.

Acute awareness of time as an unstoppable and unforgiving force

Sometimes you just need to drop what you’re doing and move on. The lesson: when the timer hits 20 minutes and you’re doing nothing, change tasks.

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