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One of my favorite psychological tricks comes from a novella by comedian Steve Martin, Shopgirl. It’s a guide to telling lies. There are three essential qualities.

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What Are the Best Life Hacks You've Learned From Fiction? One of my favorite psychological tricks comes from a novella by comedian Steve Martin, Shopgirl. It’s a guide to telling lies. There are three essential qualities to an effective lie, says the protagonist Mirabelle at a party: “First, it must be partially true. Second, it must make the hearer feel sorry for you, and third, it must be embarrassing to tell,” says Mirabelle.“Go on,” the room implies.“It must be partially true to be believable. If you arouse sympathy you’re much more likely to get what you want, and if it’s embarrassing to tell, you’re less likely to be questioned.”For example, Mirabelle says, she wanted to skip work, so she told her boss she had to go to the doctor (which she sometimes did, after all), won his sympathy for her pain, and intimated, embarrassingly, that it was a “gynecological problem.”By this point in Shopgirl, we know Mirabelle is sad, shy, and lonely, which makes her advice either suspect or authoritative. And you just know Steve Martin must have tried this one in real life.

You Need an Afternoon Routine. People are always telling you how to maximize your mornings, but your morning routine—whatever it may be—is fine. What you really need is an afternoon routine. The idea of waking up early, sitting down to breakfast, and writing a few pages in a journal sounds . For me that means chugging a glass of water, walking the dog, making a quick protein- rich breakfast, then having a cup of strong black coffee. After that, I sit down to scan for important emails, check Slack, put on some music that matches my mood that day, then get started writing. It hasn’t changed much for me in the last few years.

But come afternoon, my energy dips. I’m still full from lunch (food coma time), I’m drained from my morning writing session, my focus starts to fade so I start to mindlessly browse the internet, and my video games and Netflix queue are whispering sweet nothings in my ear. You probably know the feeling.

The afternoon is when distractions have the most power—you’re fatigued, irritable, and way more impulsive. So I had to come up with a routine that kept me productive in the afternoon yet still acknowledged my natural workflow.

  1. People are always telling you how to maximize your mornings, but your morning routine—whatever it may be—is fine. What you really need is an afternoon routine.
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Here’s what I recommend. Get Up and Move. First, get up from your desk and move your body. If you just sit there, your malaise will only get worse. I moved my daily workouts to the afternoon instead of the morning, and I now I feel more refreshed and energized. You don’t have to run or lift weights to reap the benefits, though. A simple walk around 3 p.

Even if you can’t go outside, take a walk around the office anyway. Move your body at the same time every day so your brain knows you’re still getting stuff done.

It's important to get regular exercise, even if it's a little activity here and there. You know, housekeeping, organizing, repetitive tasks, and general correspondence. Save all of that stuff for the afternoon when you can switch on autopilot and power through all of it listening to your favorite tunes. For me, this means responding to emails, finding stories to pitch, doing research for other stories, editing photos, and organizing files as need be. Unless one of those things is urgent that day, I don’t bother with it until after lunch. It’s just me, my headphones, some upbeat music, a sparkling water, and a zoned- out sprint through the tedious stuff I’ve gotta’ do.

You’d be surprised how much this change alone will do for your day. Everyone wants to check out early on Fridays, but weblog Asian Efficiency suggests completing your. Actually set a timer on your phone or whatever and do whatever you can in that five minutes. You might get into a good workflow and defeat your afternoon slump in those five minutes. If you do, be sure to reward yourself and reinforce that behavior.

If you don’t stick with it, that’s okay, don’t punish yourself. Go back to the easy stuff for a while and try again later.

For many of us, procrastination isn't necessarily a matter of laziness, but of being daunted. In writing it often refers to eye roll- inducing words or phrases, but the concept can exist in any type of work. That extra fancy graphic in your Power. Point slide show, for example, or that flashy line of code that doesn’t actually improve the user experience. Basically, the things you personally love but haven’t thought critically about. Fantastic Four (2015) Downloading here. Well, at the end of the day you’re pretty much over it, right?

That’s the time to strike. The classic saying is, “write drunk, edit sober,” but I prefer the “write drunk, edit hungover” approach (no, I don’t write drunk every day). When you’re hungover—or in this case, burned out at the end of the day—you do not care about all those little things you thought were so dreadfully clever earlier in the day.

Use your irritability to your advantage and streamline what you’ve done. You may have heard the old quote “write drunk, edit sober,” but it might actually be better to edit . Decide what to prioritize and what you need to get done in the morning when you’re awake and full of energy. Everything else can be moved to your afternoon “easy list.” I also usually spend this time writing memos to myself as well.

That way, when I get in the next morning, I have sticky note reminders all over telling me what needs to get done and I’m not wasting my mental energy trying to remember everything. Every time you go through the day and wind up behind, you tell yourself “Tomorrow will be better.”.