email organization

organization is a personal thing. one person’s messy piles of stuff are another person’s stacks of neatness. i, for example, have a hard time concentrating on a task if there are stacks of papers or books in my visual field. as a result, my desk is empty except for what i’m working on. people that walk by my office will often comment about how clean my office is; they don’t know it’s just the way i work best. i’m sure they think i’ve got ocd. meh.

the same is true for my email inbox. if i open my inbox and see a long list of emails i really don’t know what to do with myself. i mean, where do i start? at the bottom, top, or somewhere in the middle? it’s defeating before i’ve even started. so to help myself out i made a bunch of folders, and when i’m done dealing with an email i either drag it into a folder or i delete it. that means that what’s in my inbox needs my attention (i.e., i haven’t yet dealt with it). in this way it works as a task list because what’s in the inbox has to be dealt with, or the inbox gets more full. things also don’t fall through the cracks because it’s gotten missed in a long list of emails (how many times have you heard, “oh, i must have missed that one”?) – if it leaves my inbox it means it’s been considered. and when it leaves my inbox i feel a little sense of accomplishment (whatever gets me through the day, right?).
some people are more concerned than i am about keeping emails. i get so many of them that i tend not to be sentimental about them. other people save entire threads, even the emails that say, “ok” in response to a previous email. me, not so much.

i thought i’d write about this since a colleague recently told me that her new year’s resolution was to get better organized. maybe others have fascinating email filing techniques they’d like to share? if so, leave a comment.

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Healthywomen.org

Healthywomen.org is owned by the National Women’s Health Resource Center, Inc., (NWHRC). The NWHRC is a nonprofit 501c(3) organization that serves as the national clearinghouse for women’s health information. All content contained within is original content, reviewed and approved for medical accuracy by leading medical and health experts.

Thanks for pointing this nice informational site out, Librarian’s Internet Index (http://lii.org/)!

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magritte exhibit at lacma

Personal Valuesi recently viewed the art exhibit at the lacma, “magritte and contemporary art.” it is a wonderfully constructed show. john baldessari designed the exhibit area with wall-to-wall carpeting that mimics a theme in magritte paintings, sky blue background with white puffy clouds. the entrances to the exhibit areas have shapes cut out of the doorways that mimic a shape from a magritte painting. the docents wear derby hats.

the content of the show is nicely organized. in addition to the magritte paintings are the works that were inspired by them. on the wall next to the magritee painting, “personal values,” (a roomscape with objects all out of proportion: a giant comb laying on a bed, a person-sized glass standing in the middle of the room, etc.) is vija celmins’s untitled piece, a giant comb made out of wood and painted in enamel to reference the comb in magritte’s painting. for me, seeing these two pieces next to each other made the individual pieces more meaningful. there were nice surprises like this throughout the exhibit. all in all a lovely show, well worth a visit.

for more about the exhibit: http://www.lacma.org/art/MagritteIndex.aspx

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writing alone, writing with others

it seems that some people write well on their own and others feel as if things work better when they write with collaborators.  i’ve always felt that my writing style was clear enough to work on my own.  the topics i choose to write about are narrowly focused, so it’s not as if there’s a lot of room to write in a tangent or get out of hand.  but then recently i’ve been working on a big chapter for a handbook that after a while just seemed unwieldy.  that is, until i asked a colleague to read it and respond.

she gave such fabulous responses that i made the changes she suggested and then asked another colleague to read it and suggest changes.  that worked out beautifully too, and i ended up with a chapter that was really my own, but with tweaks and improvements that made it so much clearer and better organized.  i’ve learned a great lesson with this process.  when i think about my next article i’m going to include others earlier on in the process, just to see how things go!

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banana peel, laying in wait

banana peel i’ve seen the cartoons of people slipping on banana peels left on the sidewalk, but i don’t think i’ve ever seen an actual banana peel on a sidewalk in real life before. either someone carelessly discarded his trash or he is hoping to get some laughs as an innocent walker goes by…

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sandwich packets

we recently visited with my dad, and noticed that after breakfast one day he took some ziploc bags out of the freezer and put them into the fridge to thaw. one of the bags contained 4 slices of bread, the others had an amount of deli meat and cheese appropriate for one sandwich each.  he said he got tired of throwing out unused portions of sandwich fixins and so started putting the ingredients into ziploc bags and freezing them.  then later, on the day he’ll be eating a sandwich for lunch, he takes what he needs out of the freezer and puts it into the fridge to thaw.  by lunch things have thawed well enough, and then he zaps the bread in the microwave for a fresh-bread experience.  what a cool idea!  no wasted bread, no lingering piece of ham or cheese in the fridge.

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