Kitobni o'qish: «How to Be Lazy with Benefit: 100 Tricks for Smart Slackers»
Sometimes laziness is simply a signal that your system isn’t efficient. Instead of scolding yourself for procrastination, try looking at laziness from a different angle. This book gathers 100 techniques for “lazy” people that can genuinely improve your life with minimal effort. Choose one or two and introduce them gradually – small steps can lead to big changes
Routine & Organization (Minimum Effort Edition)
1. The Two-Minute Rule
If a task takes less than two minutes – do it immediately. You’ll be amazed at how many small things you can finish during the day when you stop postponing them.
2. The “One-Touch” Rule for Emails and Messages
Once you open an email or message, respond, delete, or archive it right away. Don’t leave it for later – each “I’ll handle it later” message will still demand attention again. Deal with it once and free up mental space.
3. Auto-Pay Everything
Set up automatic payments for your bills, loans, and subscriptions. This eliminates routine chores and ensures you’ll never miss a payment deadline again.
4. One Unified Calendar
Use a single calendar – on your phone, Google, or Outlook – for everything. When your entire schedule is in one place, there’s less chance to miss something. And best of all – your brain doesn’t have to store it all.
5. Ready-Made Reply Templates
Create templates for frequently sent messages or emails. Instead of rewriting the same thing again and again – a couple of clicks, and your reply is ready.
6. Five-Minute Morning Start
Before bed, jot down the one to three most important tasks for tomorrow. When you wake up, you’ll already know where to start – no half-hour “lazy planning” sessions needed.
7. Mini-Rituals
Link one small useful action to an existing habit. For example: after brushing your teeth, drink a glass of water. These “habit bundles” help you do good things automatically – even if you’re lazy by nature.
8. Don’t Open Extra Tabs
Work only with what you need right now. Close everything else. The fewer temptations to switch focus, the fewer chances to fall into procrastination.
9. Voice Notes
Record your thoughts and ideas using your phone’s voice recorder instead of typing long texts. It’s faster, easier – and perfect for those who find even typing a bit too much effort.
10. Autofill Forms
Turn on autofill in your browser for commonly used data. It saves time – no more typing your address, email, and details over and over.
Health & Energy (On Autopilot)
1. A Glass of Water by the Bed
Place a glass (or bottle) of water near your bed before sleep. Drink it right after waking up. It’s the simplest way to refresh yourself and restore fluid balance after the night.
2. Prepped Food Containers
Every 2–3 days, chop up fruits and veggies and store them in containers in the fridge. When hunger strikes, healthy food is already waiting – laziness won’t stop you from eating right.
3. The “Half-Plate” Rule
Fill half your plate with fruits or vegetables at every meal. It’s simpler than counting calories and naturally adds vitamins and fiber to your diet.
4. Drink Swap
Replace one sugary soda a day with water or unsweetened tea. Minimal effort – maximum benefit: you’ll gradually cut sugar without even trying.
5. Sleep Alarm
Set a bedtime alarm – 30–60 minutes before you want to fall asleep. This gentle reminder tells your body it’s time to wind down. You’ll go to bed on time and wake up feeling fresher.
6. Morning Mini-Stretch
Spend 2–3 minutes stretching right after waking up – in bed or standing. Even lazy “cat-like” stretching gets your blood moving and wakes you up gently.
7. Healthy Snacks Ready-to-Go
Keep simple healthy snacks – nuts, fruits, yogurt – within reach. When laziness or sudden hunger hits, you’ll grab what’s nearby. Make sure what’s nearby is good food, not chips.
8. The “Stairs Rule”
Choose stairs over the elevator whenever it’s just 1–3 floors. A bit of extra movement with zero extra effort – and you skip the elevator wait.
9. Standing Work Sessions
Work standing for 10–15 minutes every hour or so. Put your laptop on a shelf or dresser – a built-in stretch that keeps your body active and your back grateful.
10. Park Farther Away
Park a little farther from the entrance – that’s a few extra steps each day. Barely noticeable, yet adds meaningful movement over time.
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