The CIA Cheat Code to Never Getting Overwhelmed

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  • Опубликовано: 27 ноя 2021
  • Winning and losing in espionage relies as much on avoiding mistakes as it does being skilled. The same is true for you in your professional field. Top-tier competition is tight, and mastery is common. In this episode, Andrew explains the powerful CIA tool field operators use to keep from making mistakes in high-pressure situations. Now you can have the same secret solution in your hip pocket anytime you need it...
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Комментарии • 849

  • @BasicFolders
    @BasicFolders 2 года назад +619

    Oh Jeez. How is this not taught in high school? Or maybe if it were we wouldn't appreciate the value. If I had been taught this (and understood it) in my 20's it would have changed my life. Thanks for this now. 💙

    • @Generichjm
      @Generichjm Год назад

      It is because sick adults playing war games and pretending to be peter pan, decided they need more privacy than children and the innocent.

    • @MiscaTiberiuSorin
      @MiscaTiberiuSorin Год назад

      School isn't designed to teach you anything except getting you ready to be a "good" submissive worker in life in front of "authority" . As a kid when you enter school you are excited ...when you leave , you leave sad , depressed and not knowing anything .

    • @Miami7
      @Miami7 Год назад +20

      I taught this to myself at work. It only made sense to me to get the easiest thing out of the way first, not to rush through it, but to just do it. They really should teach this at school. Maybe when we get our public education system back they will.

    • @hansolo9684
      @hansolo9684 Год назад +1

      😊

    • @8daystillmonday
      @8daystillmonday Год назад +11

      I don't think I could have or would have been able to wrap my head around this in my 20s, as much as I wish that I had. I'm almost 33 and I understand what this is saying-- but it's very challenging. It requires humility. That's hard at any age.

  • @KevinTempelx
    @KevinTempelx Год назад +1397

    Andrew: How many tasks do you feel comfortable handling?
    Me: 1
    Andrew: Now subtract that number by 2 because that's what you're really capable of.
    Me: -1

    • @Meisha-san
      @Meisha-san Год назад +36

      🤣🤣🤣

    • @meatballhead15
      @meatballhead15 Год назад +55

      I kind of wish he spoke to this. I chose "2" as my safe number... -2... is 0 o.O

    • @Meisha-san
      @Meisha-san Год назад +15

      @@meatballhead15 I suppose the reasonable assumption is that everyone works best when they focus on just one task at a time. Reality, on the other hand, presents you with a variety of tasks of varying complexity and time constraints.
      These various prioritizing and triaging methods allow you to see how much you can comfortably and confidently do at any given time.

    • @Kimberly34584
      @Kimberly34584 Год назад +4

      Same 😅

    • @LucaAnamaria
      @LucaAnamaria Год назад +38

      My number is also 0. 😂 This explains why I procrastinate. 🤣

  • @unitynofear7758
    @unitynofear7758 Год назад +1735

    Operational prioritization (task triage) :
    1. Accept some tasks that some tasks will not get done.
    2. Do the task that takes the least time to complete. The fastest task. No matter what the task is.
    3. Do the task that takes the next least time to complete.
    4. Repeat this again and you've reduced the number of tasks and gotten closer to a manageable number of tasks.

    • @FactsDontCare1
      @FactsDontCare1 Год назад +79

      Saw something once on "to do" lists, and why they are bad and it is for this very reason. People do the easy tasks first, just to say they got something done, rather than doing the priority tasks first. Doesn't matter how hard you work if you are working on the wrong thing...

    • @paulscottfilms
      @paulscottfilms Год назад +26

      Also the emotional strain of some tasks are best tackled at a good timr of da 10:42 y. For me thats first thing in morning

    • @btbb3726
      @btbb3726 Год назад +34

      Creating a list makes the list manageable. If you keep in your head it can seem overwhelming that you can’t even get started. Doing the easiest tasks first alleviates pressure and anxiety and makes it easier to go on to the next task. ?

    • @unitynofear7758
      @unitynofear7758 Год назад +24

      Thanks for the upvotes. When you're not task saturated, an approach can be to 'Eat the frog' first. Doing the most unpleasant task resets your dopamine and your motivation in turn. I assume the next step is then to eat the next biggest frog.

    • @destroytheboxes
      @destroytheboxes Год назад +12

      In the real world where tasks are added back daily, this is absolutely the path to the unemployment line.

  • @riledmouse4677
    @riledmouse4677 Год назад +405

    I do writing by trade, and while my child was growing up no one could ever understand why I needed to get out of the house to get my writing done. Andrew’s summary of the constant vigilance that is required by parents is the best explanation I’ve ever found. I raised my child on my own, and I could never break that distraction when she was with me; I was always on guard in case she needed me. Somehow, being at a cafe down the street was enough of a break to allow me to focus.

    • @MountainGirlwIPA
      @MountainGirlwIPA Год назад +10

      Omg as a mom, I laughed when I read your reply..I totally get it!

    • @WK-47
      @WK-47 Год назад +19

      From one writer to another, I'm so glad to see you know how to use the semicolon. Even better, you sound like a good mother.

    • @annmalleybooks
      @annmalleybooks Год назад +5

      As a fellow writer & mother of three, I can't agree more.

    • @mikebar42
      @mikebar42 Год назад +13

      Probably why our parents told us to go outside and play

    • @auggiemarsh8682
      @auggiemarsh8682 Год назад +7

      Absolutely essential to get out of the house. And yes, as a writer myself, I also appreciate the use of the semicolon.

  • @1xRacer
    @1xRacer Год назад +72

    15 years of military service and am being medically released. My brain can never relax or feel safe. Deeply affects my quality of life and relationships. Cannot understate the importance of feeling safe, without anything to do next. What I've learned is take time for yourself, so you can be better for everyone else.

    • @risk5riskmks93
      @risk5riskmks93 11 месяцев назад +5

      I needed this. Thank you. Thank you for your service and I wish you happiness and healing.

    • @storiesreadaloud5635
      @storiesreadaloud5635 11 месяцев назад +3

      That's reality though. Maybe your brain is working normally, and the normies is not.

    • @probrickgamer
      @probrickgamer 11 месяцев назад

      Try EMDR and also read "The monkey Mind" . I have been there

    • @juliecronin8820
      @juliecronin8820 11 месяцев назад +2

      Praying you find healing, that sounds awful, I struggle with panic attacks I couldn't imagine what your going through. Don't give up you will find peace❤

    • @jjg1501
      @jjg1501 11 месяцев назад

      feeling safe is dumb when you think about it. you are NEVER safe. feeling safe is a lie. the trick is to understand you are never safe and safe at the same time. you should understand you are only safe in the one moment in time. the next moment can change and you will never know if you will be safe until it is here.

  • @bonza007
    @bonza007 Год назад +826

    When applied to non spy - shootout situations, the problem with this technique is you might end up spending all your time on urgent things, not important things.

    • @meowmix1569
      @meowmix1569 Год назад +44

      Or just that things. Could be neither urgent or important

    • @VigilanceTech
      @VigilanceTech Год назад +57

      I can find some merit to it because when you don't have time to think at least you just automatically act

    • @meowmix1569
      @meowmix1569 Год назад +8

      @@VigilanceTech or should (situationally). Fight, flight, or freeze. It's like rock, paper, scissors that you were hardwired for lol

    • @WK-47
      @WK-47 Год назад +41

      I guess there's an implicit assumption that by doing the easiest tasks first instead of 'eating your frog' and starting with what's most difficult, you'll quickly be on to the more pressing stuff.
      Still, yeah, you have to trust you or whomever will actually go from task to task. If you just do the easy stuff and stop before getting anything significant done, you won't get anywhere.

    • @nickbuletexal7896
      @nickbuletexal7896 Год назад +7

      ​@@WK-47Brian Tracy! Is that you?

  • @SensSword
    @SensSword 2 года назад +39

    This the exact same strategy as Dave Ramsey recommends for getting out of debt. It's the same strategy I thought of myself years ago when my life was in a tailspin. It's the same strategy I used to help the company I worked for get out of their rut. Now I know it works well spies too.
    At this point, this is a universal truth to me.

    • @vanillacokejunky
      @vanillacokejunky 11 месяцев назад

      I was thinking the exact same thing. "Snowball method"

  • @alex-ander-13
    @alex-ander-13 Год назад +19

    summary at 13:00

  • @MJ-xl5jz
    @MJ-xl5jz Год назад +144

    Easier said than done.
    Doing the fastest tasks first isn't always helpful, especially if they are not as important as a bigger one. And urgency plays a role too such as different deadlines. Also, it's not so easy to see what a fast task is because 1) often you have not done it before and so eastimation is horribly inaccurate and 2) you could break down almost any task into smaller ones (or sum up smaller ones into a bigger one) at will.
    Time management is difficult and ridden with useless advice. However, what's true is that you can't do everything and that it may help (but not always) to do fast tasks first just to get them off your mind.

    • @fatass-bass
      @fatass-bass Год назад +3

      It's not supposed to always be helpful, it is meant to shine in the moment that you need to use it.

    • @casey-zd5mj
      @casey-zd5mj Год назад +5

      at work when given the option I always work easier to harder, because if I spend 3hours on this difficult thing then it's going to stress me out the whole time knowing I still have 10 other smaller easier things to do, but if I knock out all the easier stuff first it makes me relax knowing I only have 1 hard thing to do left.

    • @smilerman
      @smilerman Год назад

      If u don't know that much then u wouldn't have clicked on it.. it's a matter of common sense

    • @EricLaspe
      @EricLaspe 11 месяцев назад

      @@casey-zd5mj I tend to have the opposite problem. With a daily stream of new tasks coming in, I know that I can feel good about myself by doing the next fastest task. It can seem like I'm getting a lot done. But this method can allow me to put off a big, important, difficult task for days or weeks. Having a hard task sitting on my to-do list for a long time can make it feel like a mental mountain to climb just getting started. One of the most embarrassing and shameful moments of my career occurred when I put off a difficult task while doing lots and lots of easier but less important ones until the deadline for that big one came and I had made almost no progress on it. I really dropped the ball.
      This advice is great if your task list has an actual end that can be reached in time enough to do serious work on the long-but-important task waiting for you at the end. And you can't be exhausted by the time you get there. Maybe, for some kinds of work, this method needs to be used on alternating days alongside "first, eat the frog."

    • @NicholasW943
      @NicholasW943 11 месяцев назад

      There's definitely exceptions to the rule. If you know fully your tasks and that it'd be better for you to do one that is long, then you should do that. The rule should be used when you're overwhelmed with stuff to do, because in those situations you won't have a full grasp of all the tasks. In such an environment, it's best to not try to get a clear picture of all that is going on, because that'd take too much of your time. Simply start with the shortest task and go from there.

  • @Hello-pl2qe
    @Hello-pl2qe Год назад +18

    I just went from 2 tasks to zero, good advice, I'm feeling good. Definitely works

    • @dreamwhite2886
      @dreamwhite2886 Год назад +1

      😂

    • @sammonroe3985
      @sammonroe3985 11 месяцев назад +1

      I’m at negative one.. how do you think that makes me feel!

    • @theyetti90
      @theyetti90 11 месяцев назад +1

      I too was at 2, so I guess we just stay at 2, because 1 is the loneliest number that you'll ever do.

  • @peterziggyw
    @peterziggyw Год назад +10

    In the spy scenario, "preserve your life" seemed to be a major factor in prioritizing action choices. Like the first aid prompt "first, do no harm".

  • @johnsmithe4656
    @johnsmithe4656 Год назад +6

    I have struggled with procrastination, and this is basically how I get myself moving: do the quickest thing first and just keep going. It really does work. As long as you can do those first few tiny tasks, momentum continues from there. Nice to see this advice as government training.

  • @joanneblack7697
    @joanneblack7697 Год назад +8

    "What did the kids just break?" 😂😂😂 Classic! 💓

  • @joannehart9624
    @joannehart9624 Год назад +51

    Along with task saturation, perception narrowing often follows hand in hand. During the early years of technical diving when techniques and procedures were being formulated, this was a big topic of discussion when a diver died during a dive. Focusing on one item to the exclusion of all others can be deadly. It would be very interesting to hear whether this was a talking point in your training.

  • @paulisaaksohn9179
    @paulisaaksohn9179 Год назад +80

    As Jocko says: Discipline Equals Freedom.
    Consciously and Systematically Allocating Time for Self-Improvement and Education eventually leading to Freedom.
    Andrew's version of it is great, too. Knowledge is the means, not the objective. Have discovered your channel after watching SRS (hosted by one and only Shawn Ryan). Thank you, Andrew!

  • @joanneblack7697
    @joanneblack7697 Год назад +18

    Weird how often "experts" suggest the opposite. i.e. "Do the most difficult or overwhelming task first." I like your way better Andrew.

    • @wintermatherne2524
      @wintermatherne2524 Год назад +7

      Once everything is under control, it’s best to eat the frog first thing in the morning

    • @newagain9964
      @newagain9964 Год назад

      @@wintermatherne2524fax. Eat the frog first. Or second. It pays far reaching multiple dividends than just “getting stuff done”

    • @theyetti90
      @theyetti90 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@wintermatherne2524I'm currently mulling the 2 over in my head. Maybe how you've said it is the best way.

  • @lawofattractionvlog5734
    @lawofattractionvlog5734 Год назад +12

    Thanks, Andrew! You helped me to realize that I have been trusting my own intuition as I have been facing incredible obstacles for the past several months. Oftentimes my back was against the wall and my heart was grieving painfully as I stood to lose all, but I listened to the little voice within and it has always lead me out from the jungles of confusion.

    • @bakielh229
      @bakielh229 Год назад +3

      Stop talking in vague emotional metaphors

    • @Rhiannoncout
      @Rhiannoncout Год назад

      Listening to your intuition, gut instincts and common sense will get you far.

  • @jmrumble
    @jmrumble Год назад +18

    Key Takeaways:
    - Task saturation is where the number of tasks on your mind exceeds the number you're capable of comfortably dealing with.
    - Accept that some of the tasks you have ahead of you will not get done, period.
    - To recover from task saturation, do the task that is quickest to accomplish. Repeat this as many times as necessary to regain comfort with the number of tasks on the table.
    - The first clue to task saturation is feeling uncomfortable with the number of tasks. Don't trust emotion at this point - do the next fastest thing you can do.
    - To stay ahead of saturation, estimate the number of tasks you can comfortably manage, then reduce that number by two. When you have more tasks than that result ongoing, apply the recovery technique.

  • @shaun3566
    @shaun3566 Год назад +85

    Thank you Andrew. I’m a child and youth worker and step dad to 4. I’m working through some PTSD from child welfare stuff at work; this really helped to put the simplicity back into my self-regulation strategies when being quicker to overwhelmed than my previous baseline before the PTS.
    Much thanks brother 🙏. Helping me to continue my growth as a husband, father, and professionally with greater accountability.

    • @riledmouse4677
      @riledmouse4677 Год назад +5

      Sounds like you’re killing it! Just focus on the next right task. I’m sending you strength and fortitude, and I tip my hat to you.

    • @PolishBehemoth
      @PolishBehemoth Год назад +10

      step dad to 4? did you really get with a single mom with 4 kids and accept all responsibility?

    • @devin_3875
      @devin_3875 Год назад +1

      God bless, Shaun. 🙏

    • @incredulousd9408
      @incredulousd9408 Год назад +5

      Youth worker, step dad, PTSD and all while still a child. Incredible.

    • @devin_3875
      @devin_3875 Год назад +2

      @@incredulousd9408 Hehe. Dad joke! 😅

  • @ralphmccawley1554
    @ralphmccawley1554 11 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Andrew, I subscribed to your site after watching this video, which then lead me to your other work. As I was watching it my partner was getting ready for work and a glance from her informed me she was also listening to it, so I turned the sound up a notch. As she left the room to go downstairs she turned to me and said, "I do some of that at work," and briefly explained what she meant. She asked me if I'd forward the link to her so she could watch it from the beginning and retune her performance. She works in a relatively high pressure administration role where the unbalanced dynamics of the workplace makes... anyhow, I'm rambling. Thanks for the information, anything that may make her work life more manageable is always welcome. I look forward to watching more of your work. Good luck, mate

  • @charlesclintonmd
    @charlesclintonmd Год назад +5

    As a Dr, you cannot do this. For example: you have 2 patients waiting to be seen. You can see both in front of you. One looks pale, looking bad, and the other one is smiling and thought they saw a new dimple on their arm. The fastest task would be to see the dimple but you prioritize the severity of the sick patient first. You go on to the long complex task of the ill patient. You let the other patient wait till you make sure the complicated patient doesn’t die on you. The healthy patient is pissed off because nobody has seen them in 30 minutes… well, that’s what had to be done. This leads me to the conclusion: When everything is equal-> prioritize the fastest task. If not, prioritizing should not be decided upon speed of completion. What do you think?

    • @jkgkjgkijk
      @jkgkjgkijk Год назад +2

      I think human life is the priority and trumps all other modalities.

    • @KingcoleIIV
      @KingcoleIIV Год назад +1

      In life things are rarely equal. That is when pragmatism can help.

    • @wodantheviking
      @wodantheviking 11 месяцев назад +1

      You do not need to count as a task something that has no urgency. For instance, in the spy situation the operative might need to send a birthday card to his wife, but in the circumstances of the arrival of an enemy hit team, it will simply not be on his to do list. Routine tasks can simply be erased in a high pressure scenario.

  • @n1c704
    @n1c704 Год назад +6

    I’ve literally been struggling with this lately and this is a godsend.

  • @huntsail3727
    @huntsail3727 Год назад +16

    Just came accross your channel, this is great advice.
    As a manager, other than lack of motivation, I have noticed the biggest problem most people have is trying to do too much all at the same time. We all want it all, but trying to have it all, at the same time, often results in not much getting accomplished successfully.
    The next fastest thing will work provided the 'things' on your list are important and should be there.
    Prioritize and execute - yes, but also - know what is important, know your limits and stay within them as you establish your priorities.

  • @pohkeee
    @pohkeee Год назад +1

    A horrible flaw in most for-profit enterprises…they realize they have to have a maintenance and replacement schedule for physical infrastructure( facilities and equipment)…but personnel?… they fail to see when they are over burdening and burning out their workforce! No time is factored in for physical and mental maintenance!

  • @marcbernard2481
    @marcbernard2481 Год назад +3

    It can’t hurt to listen. Wise men always listen.

  • @Miami7
    @Miami7 Год назад +6

    I like that! The same thing applies to getting out of debt when everything is coming at you. Work on paying off the smallest one first and get it done, then the next, etc. It is the only way to prioritize things.

  • @ianbossi4549
    @ianbossi4549 Год назад +4

    Thank you so much for this content. Nobody ever showed me how to organize myself. This has been truly vital information.

  • @jociecovington1286
    @jociecovington1286 Год назад +13

    I need to apply this at my job. I am a psych rn at a state facilitated psychiatric hospital in Texas. Almost a year ago, I was attacked and physically assaulted by a patient whilst attempting to calm them with talking. In my 8 years of psych nursing, this was the first time a patient has laid hands on me. I always form a very good rapport with my patients from the start. It psychological traumatized me and I have yet to be allowed to return. I will be going back next month and I am planning on how I can do things differently to ensure better safety. It is difficult due to we are perpetually very under staffed and our patients are violent. Thank you for this information!

    • @ArtSio443
      @ArtSio443 Год назад +6

      do not lose faith in your ability to establish a good rapport. It just can't work all the time and we can't control anything, just accept that. That is my humble advice. I appreciate your effort!

    • @jociecovington1286
      @jociecovington1286 Год назад +3

      @@ArtSio443 Thank you!! That is great advice! I'll take it!

    • @icysurfer1
      @icysurfer1 Год назад +1

      You have to be OK with the fact that you cannot directly control these people. I think it is too risky.

    • @Rhiannoncout
      @Rhiannoncout Год назад +3

      My mom was a R.N. at a state mental hospital and the same exact thing happened to her. She was hurt pretty badly. She had worked several years before. The patients loved and trusted her as well. I'm sure you know but it usually happens when a paranoid schizophrenic comes in off their meds. You will heal mentally and physically. Give yourself time and space to heal. There is no time limit to get over something. Trust your gut, instincts and never turn your back on any distressed patient. When you return and feel yourself getting overwhelmed or stressed take 3 deep breaths or give yourself a few minutes alone even if it's in the restroom. Keep a work journal to process your thoughts. You will be fine. I hope this helps.

    • @jociecovington1286
      @jociecovington1286 Год назад +2

      @@Rhiannoncout Thank you! I hope your mom is okay!

  • @deannevictor536
    @deannevictor536 Год назад +19

    Thank you for sharing this knowledge. It will certainly come in handy sometimes... but as an autistic person with ADHD, many times task saturation happens with 1 task. And that's why it's a disability. ☹️

    • @PeterCooperUK
      @PeterCooperUK Год назад +1

      I started knowing the number was 1 and then he said to deduct 2 from it.. 😂

    • @YZracer316
      @YZracer316 11 месяцев назад +6

      If your task saturation threshold is 1, then you need to split that task into 2 subtasks. Continue to do this until you have a task that is small enough for you to complete.

    • @randomizer2240
      @randomizer2240 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@YZracer316good idea

  • @nickfitz9800
    @nickfitz9800 Год назад +2

    Love hearing your stories and experiences and learning from them. Thank you.

  • @Kris10Ortego
    @Kris10Ortego Год назад +6

    Super helpful. Not everyone is organized so this clarity and the procedures can help clear head trash.

  • @jimo680
    @jimo680 11 месяцев назад

    Thanks so much for taking the time to share this. I work in a job where the organization's management model has forced me to operate in triage on an almost daily basis. I don't wish to remain there much longer; however, ... this just may have saved my sanity for the time that I do remain. Much thanks!

  • @TalcomoelSol
    @TalcomoelSol Год назад +3

    "Just do the next fastest thing"
    Beautiful 🔥💯

  • @magistralben1344
    @magistralben1344 Год назад +17

    How is it possible that a channel providing such invaluable information has not yet reached a million subscribers? On one hand, I genuinely hope for this channel to reach the one million subscriber milestone. On the other hand, there's a part of me that appreciates the exclusivity of this content, desiring it to remain within a community of devoted seekers who truly value it.
    Thanks Andrew🎩

    • @balancedawareness
      @balancedawareness Год назад +3

      everyone is stumbling around blind and no one wants to admit it to themselves.

    • @newagain9964
      @newagain9964 Год назад +2

      Bruh. It’s just another self-help/ life hack channel with minimal transformative or even unheard advice.

  • @ErrorOptik
    @ErrorOptik Год назад +6

    “Take the amount of tasks you think you can do and subtract 2.”
    Me: 3-2=….well damn.

  • @cchanc3
    @cchanc3 Год назад +9

    andrew has never been an air traffic controller. his sense of priorities are out the window

    • @ioannplatte
      @ioannplatte Год назад

      It's crucial for system design to address every conceivable failure mode that could bring things to this crisis level. This video is not at that level. This is about: what happens after all that? What does the ATC do when everything is failing and/or there's a flood of traffic? It's going to have to look a bit like this, I suspect. That said, I would love to hear what ATC or 911 training does about this problem.

    • @cchanc3
      @cchanc3 Год назад

      @@ioannplatte there is no "9/11 training." if you want to reroute an airplane you say cleared to (new airport) via (route), (altitude) and (further instructions). on 9/11, we just had to do that 3000 times in a few hours. the only people you hear saying how amazing it was were the media and other non-controllers. every enroute controller has rerouted an airplane many times.

    • @cchanc3
      @cchanc3 Год назад +1

      @@ioannplatte aditionally, ATC has "priority of duty." you do what needs to be done first, first. and so forth. the key is having the knowledge and experience to know what comes first, second, third. then, know that you can truly do only one thing at a time. ever.

    • @ioannplatte
      @ioannplatte Год назад

      @@cchanc3 By "911 training" I meant the training for 911 telephone dispatchers.

    • @ioannplatte
      @ioannplatte Год назад

      @@cchanc3 That's the system design I was referring to, and isn't talking about the catastrophic failure scenario I was referring to, but rather "every conceivable failure mode". This video is covering situations that for whatever reason don't have that available. That was my point. Fully agree that in any scenario where there can be a system to determine priorities reliably, using that system would be better than throwing it away in favor of the advice in this video. In fact, needing to use this advice repeatedly should be seen as a sign that there's system design work to be done.

  • @AdrianMark
    @AdrianMark Год назад +2

    I'm so glad I found your channel. Your teachings are too expensive for me right now, but I'm already saving up money to learn from you. I'm an ex-banking operations guy, turned business owner, and I absolutely relate to your concept of managing time. Thanks for making this, I hope you keep teaching and I'm looking forward to when I can get more into your stuff.

  • @mattfirman3877
    @mattfirman3877 Год назад +2

    It's really interesting how I learned all of this just by doing retail for so long and having a limited amount of time to complete a bunch of tasks. I guess I had so much time to think about it that I was able to formulate this strategy naturally.

  • @joanneblack7697
    @joanneblack7697 4 месяца назад

    I listen to this one every few months Andy. During difficult times, it really helps. Ty for this.

  • @scubarubanzaii
    @scubarubanzaii Год назад

    I learned this concept in mountain biking from a young age. It’s gotten me to be able to safely do major evasive and recovery moves in semi trucks.

  • @dialedmedia_
    @dialedmedia_ Год назад +3

    If it takes less than 15 min to complete, go ahead and take care of it. One of the best things ive learned to combat procrastination, which works hand-in-hand with Task Saturation discipline.

    • @c3d_ultra499
      @c3d_ultra499 Год назад

      Then you spend a bunch of time doing trivial stuff instead of addressing larger important tasks that need a lot of time given to them to resolve. You will be constantly putting out tiny fires while the main fire rages and is never put out. Here is a scenario where doing the quickest task first falls completely apart: little johnny is hungry and wants you to make him a bowl of cereal, he also broke his arm while playing outside. By following the advice given to complete the quickest task first we must give little Johnny a bowl of cereal to eat since he is hungry instead of taking him immediately to the hospital to get him the help he needs before any complications to his injury arise.

  • @ScottPalangi
    @ScottPalangi 2 месяца назад

    @5:35... That's huge, "reduce it by two" brilliant. Wish I heard this long ago before being the first to raise my hand in the past.

  • @AR-gh1pc
    @AR-gh1pc Год назад +8

    I absolutely suck at this. I can manage a LOT… or I used to be able to. I’m more prone to feeling overwhelmed now. I am very big picture and bite off too much sometimes considering I have lower energy than I did and I keep myself in an overwhelmed state… or a state of task saturation way too much of the time. This framework seems very useful. I suppose my task management threshold was very high and it’s not the same now and I haven’t adapted.

    • @Essential4Life
      @Essential4Life 11 месяцев назад +1

      At least you are honest with yourself. Apply what you can, rather what others expect.

  • @culbinator
    @culbinator Год назад +1

    I’ve actually been tackling my tasks list the same way without knowing any of this. Love the content

  • @George999Welch
    @George999Welch Год назад +43

    Helpful hint on crying. If a kid gets hurt and looks around to see if someone is there, but isn't already crying, don't say anything and they will usually walk away. That's how narcissists are made.

    • @Eleventyeleventh
      @Eleventyeleventh Год назад +3

      I got confused while reading, Are they made by saying anything or by not saying anything?

    • @dickdiamonds3410
      @dickdiamonds3410 Год назад +8

      ​@@Eleventyeleventhhe's saying they are made from negative attention reinforcement. That's absurd of course. Most children will cry from embarrassment. Narcissism is far more complex

    • @Ed_Gein_crafts
      @Ed_Gein_crafts Год назад +2

      Make them cry for real. Assert dominance. ( sarcasm)

    • @theyetti90
      @theyetti90 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@Ed_Gein_crafts😂

    • @philliesblunt247
      @philliesblunt247 Месяц назад

      In 4th grade we had a coaches son on our baseball team. He honestly sucked. And after every failed attempt to play the game or hit the ball he would freak out, cry and blame his dad. And he always started by crying. This was 4th grade btw

  • @Buzca
    @Buzca 11 месяцев назад

    Loved it! 💯 Thank you for sharing this!

  • @TheFormerTeam
    @TheFormerTeam 11 месяцев назад +1

    6:33 I learned this from my IFR training when I was trying to learn instrument flying for airplanes.
    A common scenario for the IFR pilot where task saturation easily occurs is getting ready to land, for example... setting up the approach, talking to ATC, flying the aircraft, maintaining situational awareness of where I physically am right now and where other traffic is right now, getting the current weather for the airport I'm flying into, briefing the approach (I brief on the ground before the flight now), and verifying that i am getting the performance I'm expecting.
    When all of those things are slamming into you at once you have to begin prioritizing what to do right now, and what to do 10 seconds from now. We break it down into Aviate, Navigate, Communicate which means anything related to keeping positive control over the aircraft is ALWAYS numero UNO! After that is handled we thing about where we are, where we're going, and where everyone else is, then we can start talking to ATC.
    Hearing you put that process directly into words was definitely eye opening as if someone asked me "How do you deal with task saturation?" I really wouldn't have been able to answer, but now I can. Thank you.

  • @user-mo6wq8wj6m
    @user-mo6wq8wj6m Год назад +6

    Nurses need this in school …would help a lot in the beginning.
    Somehow I have learned it on my own but this clarifies how to do it even better.

    • @Liahs333
      @Liahs333 Год назад

      Actually nurses do learn this in school. It’s called triage. You triage your patients and you triage your work.

  • @colem1423
    @colem1423 Год назад

    Thank you for the knowledge! I appreciate this as it helps me regain my brings after my car wreck.

  • @Sud0F1nch
    @Sud0F1nch 11 месяцев назад

    Just watched this for the first time.
    Got a vibe this is something I needed to hear
    Thank you.

  • @markschneider2307
    @markschneider2307 Год назад +1

    That was very helpful, Thank You

  • @Kingsper69
    @Kingsper69 Год назад +2

    “Many people can hand 5-7 things at the same time, like my wife.”
    Shit sounds so funny out of context😭

  • @ScottPalangi
    @ScottPalangi 2 месяца назад

    I think what's also instructive here with the vehicular example of reflexes, is this: those reflexes the mature driver (now) has, were learned over years of non-stressed driving (Royce Gracie explained this to me live in 1995 at a seminar he was hosting, it's a famous talk he gives at seminars during the headlock escapes (and everyone is usually trying to kill each with strength) and he brings up the "smoove is fast" from his first time on the gun range with a pro coach.

  • @taminutall6241
    @taminutall6241 4 месяца назад +1

    I have done this the last 2 days and literally ALL of my laundry is washed AND put away (after 3 months), bed and bedroom cleaned, half of my junk boxes sorted and condensed, litter boxes washed and refilled, and a few other things...WITH 8-9 hours of sleep, naps/rest breaks, 3 cooked meals, movie marathons, and 😉 -- all after waking up at 11am both days. I have done this exact list for each day, btw. This method is life changing!!!! Thank you
    P.s. it feels sooooo good to sleep in a cleaner house

  • @MrBeefsnorkel
    @MrBeefsnorkel Год назад +5

    for the next 60 days im going to implement this into my everyday life, on a hardcore level. will report the results. thank you

  • @user-dq1pw3cz4x
    @user-dq1pw3cz4x 11 месяцев назад

    So helpful and well-conveyed. Truly appreciate you sharing your knowledge here!. So helpful and well-conveyed. Truly appreciate you sharing your knowledge here!.

  • @davidescobedo5965
    @davidescobedo5965 4 месяца назад

    man this is gold. It'd be great to learn of any goal saturation management / recovery systems. essentially "long-term" tasks. I would imagine it could be similar to this.

  • @GOTHAM21
    @GOTHAM21 6 месяцев назад

    I love this format and intro. Sets my mood right.

  • @adamwalker8173
    @adamwalker8173 Год назад

    Great stuff Andrew thanks!

  • @AnthonyCurley
    @AnthonyCurley Год назад

    Even though the video is 1 year old, it's new to me, and it's fantastic. This is how computer processors prioritize their work, and it has the added benefit of reducing total wait time for all tasks.
    Some comments seem to be missing the point. I don't think the "subtract 2" is set in stone. It's a way to combat those of us who overestimate our capabilities. For those who underestimate, you should probably stick with the original number you came up with.
    Also, I think, since we're already accepting some of these tasks won't get done, maybe before we see which task is smallest, that we first see which tasks we can just say "no" to immediately. Then start with the smallest task.

  • @Corteum
    @Corteum Год назад +15

    From the CIA's perspective, what is right with the current educational system in America, and what is wrong with it? What is it doing right, and what is it doing wrong? Andrew!

    • @slappy8941
      @slappy8941 Год назад +2

      From the CIA perspective?
      Well, what's right with the system is that it's turning out a bunch of brainless morons who utterly lack the capacity for critical thought. What's wrong with the system is that a few slip through the cracks.

    • @ArlenGunClub
      @ArlenGunClub Год назад +1

      @@slappy8941 Too bad your comment was hidden. It's true.

    • @ArtSio443
      @ArtSio443 Год назад

      ​@@ArlenGunClubwhat did it say?

    • @ArlenGunClub
      @ArlenGunClub Год назад +2

      @@ArtSio443 If you sort comments by newest first you can see it. In a nutshell, the CIA would prefer that our educational system be anything but educational.

    • @tatie7604
      @tatie7604 Год назад

      Why?

  • @angelinafun8336
    @angelinafun8336 Год назад

    Absolutely so helpful. I will apply this to everything I do now.

  • @fixfaxerify
    @fixfaxerify Год назад +3

    It seems to me a weak point of this method is how you define a "task". Depending on how you cut the cake, you are either task saturated or totally fine. If you decide you have one task: "Deal with reality and life", you are never task saturated. On the other hand you can cut that task in to almost endless sub-tasks and almost always be task saturated.

  • @Shesanultra
    @Shesanultra Год назад +257

    The people at the CIA need to get real jobs, instead of being hard core criminals.

    • @aWomanFreed
      @aWomanFreed Год назад

      They’re destroying the world by focusing on their individual tasks instead of looking at the cumulative effects of their “work”

    • @canadiancombatwombatthe3rd782
      @canadiancombatwombatthe3rd782 Год назад

      Agreed, the CIA is gaeeee

    • @sovereigncosmicwildman
      @sovereigncosmicwildman Год назад +1

      Exactly!! they are nothing but criminals in action (scum)

    • @bananaboyTS
      @bananaboyTS Год назад +22

      real and true

    • @newagain9964
      @newagain9964 Год назад +32

      ….What if I told u being hardcore criminals is the job…😎

  • @darrelllee5151
    @darrelllee5151 Год назад

    Oh I see, I already did sub ! Well done You have an opropiat deliverance of info, with the right aptitude to seek understanding.

  • @bzeuzsak
    @bzeuzsak 11 месяцев назад

    I haven't heard this in a LONG time! Thank you for posting this. 📫

  • @valuehealth
    @valuehealth Год назад +1

    Thank you Andrew!

  • @storynory7076
    @storynory7076 4 месяца назад

    Thank you. Your advice applies exactly to me and my life.

  • @vincentbatson4523
    @vincentbatson4523 10 месяцев назад

    Yo Andrew that soundtrack by tone Jones is Nice. I'm definitely going to support and continue to listen to you and figure out my next moves in life

  • @parkerstroh6586
    @parkerstroh6586 8 месяцев назад

    Single best thing I've heard in a long while

  • @unseenadventures8130
    @unseenadventures8130 Год назад

    This makes so much sense thank you sir!

  • @DigitalBard1
    @DigitalBard1 Год назад +3

    Please do a work order sequence, for a chef working in a professional kitchen, during a busy lunch service.
    Its common to be doing upwards of 20-30 tasks simultaneously. It isn't always an option to disregard a particular individual task. It becomes more a case of getting certain tasks going, then moving to some more, set them off, then flip back to the others, then set some more off, and then bring them all together in a simultaneous moment.
    The stress and time management of a chefs mind, is comparable to a super computer. As the basic sequencing model, gets rather complex. With tasks being shuffled around, grouped together, and juggled at a fast pace, with a constant steady stream of new tasks being added and completed at the same time.
    The alogorithmical, and prioritising processing speed, seems faster than lighting, and sometimes it feels like time is bending.
    Giving in to stress is never an option though, for if you stop, the whole process grinds to a halt, and the whole system collapses. The pressure is immense.
    The order of sequence becomes important, as some tasks will be more efficient to be perform with certain other ones, and some less efficient, so the mind is continuously working to collate and group and shuffle, then complete 3 or 4 or 5 tasks together, to make room for the next grouping.
    Its a phenomenonal pattern to study. And the variables multiplied with more variables, make no two task sheets the same.

    • @michellewoodson4696
      @michellewoodson4696 Год назад

      Ive never heard it so precisely described. The sheer vume of calculations performed during a dinner rush is amazing & exhausting & can be thrownn of by 1 stupid question or piece of advice by a manager lol. Helps alot if the whole kitchen crew is a little bit psychic

    • @DigitalBard1
      @DigitalBard1 Год назад

      @@michellewoodson4696 Yeah a bit psychic really helps. You kind of get into a groove with each other right?
      And yeah if a waitress drops a plate. Or if someone fucks up an order. Then your in trouble.

  • @namepending155
    @namepending155 Год назад +2

    “Irregardless” is a non-standard term for “regardless”.

  • @Cotton088
    @Cotton088 Год назад

    Did you just say “irregardless?” Love your podcasts.

  • @bryanlittle4647
    @bryanlittle4647 Год назад +32

    It's good to have a familiy-man's perspective on this. A lot of people in this field do not have a family/kids so it's nice to hear analogies with family/kids. You killed it on the Lex Fridman podcast btw!

  • @benbarrera3851
    @benbarrera3851 11 месяцев назад

    Nice, I'm actually learning something. Thank you.

  • @alexstosssucks4032
    @alexstosssucks4032 2 года назад +5

    you’re awesome dude. so sick. glad i found you on konkrete podcast! so sick.

    • @WolverineTraining
      @WolverineTraining 2 года назад

      Yes I agree. Definitely going to read your book and get to a live training.

    • @ryancrozier7674
      @ryancrozier7674 2 года назад +1

      Same. Koncrete hook up !

  • @travisleabeck2572
    @travisleabeck2572 Год назад

    I find this interesting as I've taught people how to manage and overcome addiction through a very similar method. What is you upper limit with any particular substance. What will break you in a day? Half that. That's your new upper limit. But then you half that again and the moment you approach that quarter point you need to be doing foundational checks to make sure that no cracks are appearing at the seams of your self. Maintaining self is the key to mastering one's drug usage and the same is true in task management.

  • @samsmusichub
    @samsmusichub 2 месяца назад

    I feel saturated at work. I constantly feel like I need to sacrifice quality in order to complete the tasks I'm given, and I'm a recovering perfectionist so i appreciate this video because I'd love to learn how to better manage my time and tasks.

  • @sojournsojourntraveler1203
    @sojournsojourntraveler1203 7 месяцев назад

    This why I have do list , more inefficient use of time is getting caught up on your list
    and have no idea about what I need to do next .

  • @rickr2772
    @rickr2772 Год назад

    You forgot to mention how this goes when other people have their hands on your time and can reset your priorities at will.
    Task Saturation is where I spend my days. I don't get to decide what happens next, and there's always at least one of those people who direct my time who gets disappointed, reports my "failure" to management, and I get invited to a closed-door meeting about my refusal to work cooperatively.
    This is a great process - where it is allowed.

  • @herogaming97
    @herogaming97 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you I needed that 🙏🏽

  • @maryforbes4277
    @maryforbes4277 Год назад

    Thank you for this information! I feel more at peace already.

  • @jameswynn4699
    @jameswynn4699 Год назад +13

    One can only hope the CIA continues to have worse than task overload in the future

    • @DavidHughey-xu2ce
      @DavidHughey-xu2ce Год назад +1

      THE STREETS ARE
      PAVED WITH BLOOD:
      CONCRETE IS
      MADE WITH BLOOD

  • @dialedmedia_
    @dialedmedia_ Год назад

    In Summary:
    Task Saturation
    - Understand Personal Threshold for Managing Tasks. (Parental Multi-tasking)
    - If a task takes less than 15 min to accomplish, task takes priority based on time sensitivity.
    - Take number of tasks in task management threshold, reduce by two. (Im able to complete 5 tasks simultaneously, I’ll commit to 3 for ease of mind and efficient completion.)
    - More tasks than able to immediately prioritize = Task Saturation.
    - Understand and realize some of the tasks you have ahead of you will not be completed.
    - Triage - Simplify your tasks down to brass tacks.
    - Least time to completion = first task taken. Break down tasks by time for completion. Complete in least to greatest order.
    - Emotions dominate your conscious thought if you’re in Task Saturation.
    - Do The Next Fastest Task!
    Thank you so much for this info, i have it saved in my notes and will cite and forward to friends and family who i feel get overwhelmed by tasks in their day-to-day lives.

  • @explainingpolitics
    @explainingpolitics 11 месяцев назад +2

    When I was in 2nd grade we would do these math sheets. we naturally did them in order, from the top starting with the left and going right. Early on I would scan the paper and start finishing the simplest problems first and I would finish my word so much faster than everyone else.
    I have been putting this strategy into work my entire life since, glad to know this is how the pros do it. I missed my calling 🤦‍♂

  • @willl7134
    @willl7134 Год назад

    This was great. Loved the analogy.

  • @darrelllee5151
    @darrelllee5151 Год назад

    Right off the batt. I love your intro music !

  • @eagleriver900
    @eagleriver900 Год назад

    Thanks friend . Good advice !

  • @beezneez2056
    @beezneez2056 Год назад +3

    Kind of like the debt snowball for tasks. I like it

  • @UnrebornMortuus
    @UnrebornMortuus 11 месяцев назад

    Wether or not you teach me these tools directly, I will continue to learn and surpass you.

  • @AuthorWilliamMiller
    @AuthorWilliamMiller 10 месяцев назад

    As a business owner, this advice is gold!

  • @brendonmasters
    @brendonmasters Год назад +1

    Drummers are the original CIA agent. 4 tasks at once. And that’s not counting the mind wandering during all the above. 5 tasks. ❤️ the drums

  • @sueelliott4793
    @sueelliott4793 4 месяца назад

    I love this guy, seen quite a few of his talks.

  • @Canada-gs3jc
    @Canada-gs3jc Год назад

    Great info for anybody running there own business!

  • @alex-ander-13
    @alex-ander-13 Год назад

    thank you Andrew!

  • @EnkiSvohden
    @EnkiSvohden Год назад +3

    A dude who worked for the CIA playing a song singing "freedom." Bwahahahaha!

  • @elsuperpollo2273
    @elsuperpollo2273 11 месяцев назад

    Ironically I heard about this lesson working EP/PSD for a security company. I wouldn't be surprised one of my on the job training supervisor was one of your guys

  • @MountainGirlwIPA
    @MountainGirlwIPA Год назад

    I appreciate the advice. It took me years to realize that I cannot multitask. Perhaps thats a limitation but not doing what you say that you are going to do, is a hell of a lot worse.

  • @Skiz13435
    @Skiz13435 Год назад

    Keyed. Thank you brother,