2012-09-05

The To D'oh! List: Limiting and Learning from Your Mistakes [Mistakes]

The To D'oh! List: Limiting and Learning from Your MistakesI used to hide from my mistakes as if recognizing them was an acknowledgement of fundamental, irreversible flaws. Then I decided that's a stupid way to view the world. That's when I started my To D'oh! list.


We all make mistakes. Some of them are minor things. Others are catastrophic and massive in scale. Others still are weird, repeating quirks that need acknowledgement and repetition before they can go away. It's easy to say to yourself, "I've made a mistake, I won't do it again." It's harder to write it out and face it nearly every day.


Start Your To D'oh! List


The To D'oh! List: Limiting and Learning from Your MistakesFor me, the To D'oh! list was born out of the need to keep my mistakes here at Lifehacker in order. It initially started as a text file called "Thorin's List of Troublesome Words" and included my most common mistakes with tense, headline capitalization, and other things.


Over time, that list has evolved into a more generalized list of mistakes. I keep a single file on Simplenote so I can access it and add new things wherever I am. It even has sections:



  • Thorin's List of Troublesome Words: As mentioned above, this is where I write down my common grammar mistakes, misuse, and other writing-related things.

  • Work D'oh's: Here I'll dump ideas that didn't seem to go anywhere, failed post ideas, times I should have asked for help, and any workflow related issues I run into.

  • Project D'oh's: This is my failure bin for various DIY projects. It includes mistakes from projects—usually regarding my misuse of power tools or materials.

  • Life D'oh's: These are the general d'oh's, ranging from getting lost when blindly following GPS directions to considerably stupider things I won't bore you with. I'll also toss in embarrassing moments in public so I can look back and see why I was embarrassed.

  • Delayed Response File: You know those moments, fifteen minutes after you have a conversation, where you come up with a better response to something someone said? I put those responses here.


One key thing to note is that these To d'ohs aren't just for complete failures. They can also include smaller things I've made mistakes on, like a misstep in a project, or minor mistakes from things that were still finished. The list is also a collection of better solutions I came up with after the fact so that next time I do something, I do it right.


After all, nothing is perfect, and most things we all do have lessons in them somewhere. Photo by Steve Jurveston .


How the To D'oh List Helped Me


Like most people, I have always recognized my mistakes, and I've certainly tried to take useful lessons from them. However, it wasn't until I really looked at them directly that I began to notice themes, and I began to really work on them. This isn't a new idea by any means, but the act of writing down mistakes has stopped me from making the same ones twice.


In some cases, the corrections are mostly subconscious. My list of troublesome words, for instance, has mostly been eradicated (although more always get added in). My behavior has changed too. I'll often spend a bit more time reflecting on things. I often return to the To D'oh! text in my brain when I'm in similar situations so I can backtrack, and not repeat a mistake.


In the end, my To D'oh list is a collection of everything I've learned, not every mistake I've made. The list is filled with both causes, and effects. When need be, it's a place to find inspiration for how to do things differently. I'm not going to stop making mistakes, but at least they'll be new ones.







via Lifehacker http://lifehacker.com/5936500/the-to-doh-list-limiting-and-learning-from-your-mistakes

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