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Why Boring Tasks Are Important… And How to Get Through Them

Boring Tasks

Without a doubt, there are a lot of tasks and things in this world that we do that are boring and mundane… but that is also good for us.

Whether it’s balancing the books, eating the same meals again and again, or compiling repetitive Excel spreadsheets, these things all have an incredible value that can lead to long-term success and payoffs, but while we’re doing them they just seem dull, repetitive, and… boring.

Now a lot of things can be rewired to become inherently interesting to us – especially if the stakes and consequences change. But the fact remains, sometimes you just have to “do the work” when it comes to repetitive things.

So the question becomes – how do we keep doing the boring things, without getting bored of them?

There’s the common saying of “work hard, play hard”, and our interpretation of the message behind that is to be consistent in your work and what’s important and to use other activities to balance out the repetitiveness of the boring things.

Another way of putting it:

Balance out the repetitive with the exceptional.

Switch up things when you need to, using downtime and play.

A Long-Term Solution to Boredom

The actual, long-term solution to handling boring tasks is to make them interesting or to turn them into unconscious habits.

Making them interesting is actually the harder of the two. If you have work tasks that are boring, it may be impossible – unless you really learn to love your job and/or business. Doing so won’t make everything super-exciting, but the boring parts become less boring. A good example of this is you may hate balancing the books or processing payroll – until you realize doing so can reveal accounting inefficiencies that add to the bottom line, or that making sure your team is paid on time adds tremendous value to the entire business.

Turning boring tasks into unconscious habits is more straightforward. While there is a more granular method available for forming habits, the simplest way is this: do it for 30 days. For those 30 days, it’ll be boring (yawn). But after that, it becomes routine and you stop thinking about it – and you just do it. One really common example is going to the gym. For the first 30 days, you need to JUST GO. After that, it becomes a habit… and an addiction.

Short-Term Solutions to Boredom

So that’s nice and good… but what about in the short-term?

What can we do right now to alleviate the boredom and add the exceptional to the repetitive?

Well, that’s the answer right there – spike your time with interesting activities…. but structure them in and place limiters on them.

This can be anything from structured downtime to a once-off activity, to just doing something different. We all do this naturally in some form anyway – let me elaborate.

We have a lot of friends who work 9-5. Nothing wrong with that.

All week, what they’re looking forward to is Friday night drinks at the pub – this is their only exciting “spike” for the week.

But the truth is, you can create your own spikes.

Here are some examples to get you started:

What these self-induced spikes do is they alleviate the boredom. They let us balance out the repetitive with the exceptional.

They also let us limit the degree of our spikes, and how many of them there are – this is important, as the mundane still does need to get done.

In Closing

In the short-term, find things to distract you – but structure them so that they are limited.

In the long-term, learn to form habits. Just do it for 30 days, and let it sink into your patterns of behavior.

And finally, learn to make the boring… interesting. Learn to love what you do – or go do something else!

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