Is the Domino Effect Blocking Your Progress?
I can’t make dinner because the dishes are clean. What?!
Let me explain.
I want to fill my big pasta pot with water to boil pasta but I can’t fit it under the faucet because the sink is full of dirty dishes. Bummer! I open the dishwasher to put the dirty dishes into the dishwasher but the dishwasher is full of clean dishes. Hrmph! So, I have to put away the clean dishes so that I can put the dirty dishes into the dishwasher so that I can fill the pasta pot so that I can boil water so that I can make pasta for dinner.
Ah, the domino effect.
As you may have figured out, the domino effect is the situation in which you can’t do the task you want to do until an earlier task is done. Just like dominoes standing in a line, the first domino has to fall before the others fall.
Do you have a to-do list with some items on it that have been there for weeks? months? (years??) Look at them. Ask yourself whether those items are not getting done because something else — perhaps something small but easily overlooked – needs to be done first?
In my dinner example, I easily traced the holdup to the first “domino” task — the clean dishes – and took care of that before I was able to take care of the next “domino” task. But there are cases where it’s not so clear what’s going on or what the first “domino” task is. All you know is that you have a vague feeling that you don’t want to do a certain task and you procrastinate instead of figuring out what’s wrong. There are many reasons why people procrastinate on their tasks but the domino effect is a sneaky one, one that’s once identified, makes it easy to zip through the task that you’ve been dreading.
Do you need to “call Bill” but you’ve been putting it off for a while and you don’t know why? Think about what’s holding up this task. Could it be that you don’t have Bill’s phone number and you don’t know where to get it? If that’s the case, you need to add the task, “think about whom to ask for Bill’s number” before you can get to your original task. Now that you’ve traced the task to its true beginning you can get this done. Your brain will no longer be trying to call Bill without a phone number. Your brain will have a new directive to think of the person who might know Bill’s number. Once you’ve come up with the person, your task becomes easier. You go ask that person and now, armed with a phone number, you can finally “call Bill.”
Now, wasn’t that easy?
Are there any tasks on your to-do list that are held up by other tasks that you need to do first?











