I meant to answer earlier, but the afternoon disappeared on me and then I got pulled into helping reorganize a shelf that had turned into complete chaos.
I finally finished that small project we talked about, and it actually went better once I stopped overthinking every step. I made a simple list, worked through one thing at a time, and suddenly it all felt manageable. That usually never happens for me on the first try.
I also took a short walk before dinner and it helped reset my mood more than I expected. Sometimes just getting outside for ten minutes changes the whole direction of the day. If you are still deciding what to do, I would keep it low pressure and just start with the easiest part first.
I can help again tomorrow if you want. I should have a quieter window in the late morning, and I am happy to look things over or just keep you company while you sort it out.
I checked the notes you sent and I think your original plan still makes sense, just with fewer steps packed into one day.
I would probably split it into two smaller sessions and leave a break in between so everything stays easier to track. When I rush, I miss obvious details and then spend more time fixing them later. It helps me to pause and reset before moving on to the next part.
I also found that clearing off the table first made it easier to focus because there was less visual clutter pulling my attention around. That sounds minor, but it made a bigger difference than I expected. I kept a scrap piece of paper nearby and wrote down anything unrelated that popped into my head so I would not drift off task.
If you want, send me what you have by tomorrow afternoon and I can go through it with fresh eyes. I am not busy then, and I do better when I can look at something slowly and carefully.