I was noticing something interesting about my productivity lately.
I am so much more productive when I listen to music while working.
But there's a fine line.
There's a balance between being fully locked in and working where the music helps me get in the right mind-state and when I get distracted and get too much into the music.
Your mind-state makes such a world of difference in everything you do.
When I'm in the right mind-state, I can focus for hours.
When I'm not, even simple tasks feel like pulling teeth.
But here's what I've realized:
There's always something pulling at our attention.
Notifications. Emails. Random thoughts. The next shiny project.
That's why prioritizing becomes the most important thing.
Not just having priorities, but setting the right priorities.
Your priorities can help you change everything.
But most people never take the time to actually evaluate theirs.
They just react to whatever feels urgent.
They let other people's priorities become their priorities.
They work on what's in front of them instead of what actually matters.
That's a recipe for feeling busy but never moving forward.
So I've been thinking about building something to help with this.
A priorities checklist where you can see how your current priorities stack up.
Which ones you should actually focus on.
And a gameplan to help you get there.
I'd build this within Curavera as another wellness tool.
Because I think mental clarity about your priorities is just as important as physical wellness.
Maybe more important.
But before I spend time building it, I want to know:
Would you be interested in something like this?
A simple tool that helps you step back, evaluate your priorities, and create a clear action plan for what actually matters?
Hit reply and let me know.
If enough people are interested, I'll add it to Curavera.
If not, I'll focus my energy somewhere else.
That's the power of good priorities.
You build what is actually useful, not just what you think people might like.
Sean May
Science Of Imagery
P.S. Even if you're not interested in the priorities tool, I'm curious - what's your secret for getting in the right mind-state to be productive? Music? Silence? Something else entirely?