Organize Your Mind, Organize Your Life

Organize Your Mind, Organize Your Life Read Free Page B

Book: Organize Your Mind, Organize Your Life Read Free
Author: Margaret Moore
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proudly. “Everybody in our house has their job, and that one’s mine.”
    Actually it’s one of many jobs, as you can see.
    How does Shmerling cram it all into one day, one week, one life, and make it look easy?
    He admits that he is a creature of habit and was always fairly structured. “I can recall organizing the crayons by color in those sixty-four-Crayola packs as a little kid,” he says with a laugh. But, he’s quick to add, a lot of the skills that help keep him organized he learned because he had to. And he’s still learning. “I’ve gotten better at ignoring things,” he said. For example, “We have this e-mail system where a quick preview of the e-mail comes up on your screen, and at first it was distracting. Now I’ve gotten better at sticking with the matter at hand. If it’s a really important message, I can attend to it, but I don’t let them distract me as they pop up.”
    In the hospital, things come at Dr. Shmerling fast and furious. A patient’s condition might change. An administrative problem may arise. A resident or a nurse or a colleague may need an immediate answer. And sometimes the decisions really are a matter of life and death. “I used to get more easily flustered when several things were coming at me,” he says. “Now I’ve learned how to deal with it. Now I can shift pretty quickly from one thing to another and prioritize.”
    The problems that do come up are often complex ones—what course of action to prescribe to someone with arthritis, lupus or osteoporosis; dealing with patient complaints or concerns; helping to mediate or referee internal problems that arise, whether with staff or fellow physicians. He knows how to act, but he also knows how to think before he acts.“I try to imagine the range of options for a given situation and figure out fairly quickly if this is something I’ve seen before,” he explains. “If not, if it’s something better done by someone else, or if I’m going to need someone else’s help solving this, I mentally file it away, putting it aside for later.”
    Putting his attention on and pulling it off, deftly and smoothly, as the need arises—that’s a sign, as we’ll see, of an organized mind. Dr. Shmerling does it with a range of tools, some high-tech, some not. “If I have to jump off something, I’ll bookmark what I was working on,” he says. “Either with a mental or actual Post-it note so I can return to the right place quickly later on.” He also has a nice trick for keeping track of his reading (and in his job, he does a lot of it—reports, memos, articles). If he’s reading a Word document on the computer, “I’ll yellow-highlight the line I’m on so I can get right back to the page and the line I was on, without wasting time scanning through the document, going ‘where was I?’”
    Shmerling uses a PalmPilot to keep track of appointments and to have other important information at a glance when he needs it, even though, he admits, “I’m regularly laughed at for using a device so ancient.” And while you might think someone being held up as an exemplar of efficient organization would have an empty, ordered desk at the end of each day, it’s not the case. Dr. Shmerling’s offices at home and at the hospital are filled with stacks of books and papers—but, he says, “While it might not look organized to you, I know exactly where everything is.”
    The efficiency allows him some simple pleasures during the work day. People who feel overworked often claim they have no time to read anything but e-mails or work-related documents. Shmerling not only finds time to read The Boston Globe every morning online, he spends an extra few minutes doing the popular Sudoku numbers puzzle; and is adiligent fan of Doonesbury and Dilbert (“Another efficient office

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