I meant to reply earlier, but the afternoon got away from me and then I ended up reorganizing that drawer I kept ignoring for weeks. It started with looking for one thing and somehow turned into sorting old notes, spare cables, and a set of keys I still cannot identify.
I think tomorrow works better if we keep it simple and just pick one task to finish properly instead of trying to force five things into one block of time. I know it feels better to make a long list, but I usually feel more settled when there is one clear end point and everything else becomes optional.
If you want, send me the short version tonight and I can look at it in the morning. That way you are not carrying it around in your head, and we can start clean.
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FedEx support update
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I tried that approach last time and it actually helped more than I expected. Instead of waiting until everything felt perfectly planned, I just started with the easiest part and let the rest come together. That removed a lot of the pressure and made the whole thing feel less tangled.
I also realized I do better when I stop checking back every few minutes to see whether I am on track. It sounds small, but constantly measuring progress makes me slower. If I put my phone in another room and keep one tab open, I finish faster and feel a lot less scattered afterward.
So yes, I think your idea can work, but only if you keep the setup light. Give yourself a normal starting point, leave room for adjustments, and don’t wait for the perfect moment to begin.