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Home Lifestyle

The Power of Re-Prioritising Weekly: My Productivity System as an Actor and Volunteer

by henry
3 months ago
in Lifestyle
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Man planning weekly schedule desk
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Table of Contents

  • Why You Need to Re-Prioritize Every Week
  • The Problem with Static To-Do Lists
    • Your Week Isn’t Predictable
    • Lists Grow, Focus Shrinks
  • My Weekly Reset System
    • Step 1: Weekly Review
    • Step 2: The “Keep-Cut-Start” Rule
    • Step 3: Pick Your Top Three
  • Tools I Use
    • Google Keep
    • Paper Planner
    • Timer Blocks
    • Sunday Nights = Reset Time
  • What I Learned from Acting and Volunteering
    • Unpredictability Is the Norm
    • Saying Yes to Everything Kills Focus
  • Why This Works at Any Age or Career Stage
  • Some Quick Stats to Consider
  • Try This Today
  • Final Thought

Why You Need to Re-Prioritize Every Week

Most people make to-do lists and stick with them until they fall apart. That’s the problem. Life doesn’t follow one fixed plan. Your schedule changes. Priorities shift. If you don’t update your game plan weekly, you fall behind fast.

A weekly reset works better. It gives you room to adjust. You stay flexible but focused. You’re not just reacting—you’re choosing what matters most right now.

Re-prioritising weekly has changed how I work, plan, and stay sane. I act, volunteer, write, and run community projects. My time is never free. But I’m rarely overwhelmed. This system works because it’s simple. It’s fast. It’s repeatable. Anyone can do it.

The Problem with Static To-Do Lists

Your Week Isn’t Predictable

One Monday, you’re prepping auditions. Next Monday, your kid has a school event. A food pantry call comes in. Your short film script needs editing. Suddenly, that “Top 10 Goals” list from last week makes no sense.

Static plans don’t keep up. They assume the week will go how you imagined. It won’t.

Lists Grow, Focus Shrinks

People love long lists. But long lists don’t equal progress. Research from the University of California Irvine shows that task-switching reduces productivity by up to 40%. A crowded list pulls your attention in too many directions. You lose momentum.

Your brain needs focus. Re-prioritising gives it that.

My Weekly Reset System

Step 1: Weekly Review

Every Sunday night, I review the past week. I write down three things:

  • What worked
  • What didn’t
  • What surprised me

This gives me feedback. It keeps me honest. I know what to change going into the next week.

Example: Last week, I had five auditions planned. I only submitted two. Why? My volunteering shift ran long, and I got stuck on logistics for a toy drive. Good to know. I can adjust this week.

Step 2: The “Keep-Cut-Start” Rule

I look at my tasks and use three buckets:

  • Keep: What stays
  • Cut: What’s not urgent anymore
  • Start: What’s new and matters now

It takes 10 minutes, tops. But it gives me a real plan, not a dream list.

For instance:

  • Keep: Script work for a short film I committed to
  • Cut: Social media batching—I’ll wing it this week
  • Start: Schedule a call with the food pantry director about donation pickups

That’s it. Three actions, not thirty.

Step 3: Pick Your Top Three

I choose three things that must happen this week. Not “should.” Not “want to.” Must.

They get my best time. Mornings, no interruptions. If I do them, the week’s a win.

One week it might be:

  • Record and send two self-tapes
  • Organise tag printing for Operation Santa
  • Submit grant proposal for community project

Everything else fits around those three.

Tools I Use

Google Keep

Simple checklists. Quick notes. Works on my phone and laptop. I don’t overthink it.

Paper Planner

I still use a notebook. I write my top three goals at the top. I cross them off with a pen. It feels better.

Timer Blocks

I work in 45-minute chunks. Then I break. I use a kitchen timer. No fancy apps. I don’t want more screens.

Sunday Nights = Reset Time

I block Sunday night at 8:30 PM. Same time every week. I get quiet, think, reset. No calls, no email. This habit alone has kept me on track more than anything else.

What I Learned from Acting and Volunteering

Unpredictability Is the Norm

As an actor, you don’t know when the next audition will land. As a volunteer, someone might call and say a truckload of food needs sorting in two hours. You can’t plan for everything. But you can be ready to pivot.

That’s why weekly re-prioritising works. It gives you room to move.

Saying Yes to Everything Kills Focus

I used to say yes to every project, call, and shift. It burned me out.

Now, I say yes to what fits into the top three. I say no to the rest—or I delay it.

When Bobbie Mangini shared her productivity method, she said, “Every week, I sit down and ask, what really matters this week?” That stuck with me. It’s not about doing everything. It’s about doing the right things.

Why This Works at Any Age or Career Stage

It doesn’t matter if you’re 25 or 55. You don’t need to be famous, wealthy, or full-time anything. This method works if you’re juggling:

  • A creative career
  • A job and side hustle
  • Parenting and community work
  • Burnout and reset goals

You just need structure. Not strict rules—just a system that makes space for what matters.

Some Quick Stats to Consider

  • The average person spends over 21 hours a week on their phone, according to RescueTime. That’s a part-time job.
  • The American Psychological Association found that 79% of adults feel stressed by time management.
  • Task batching can improve productivity by 25%, per research from the University of Michigan.

A weekly reset won’t solve everything. But it gives you control back.

Try This Today

  • Pick one day this week to reset
  • Review your past week (3 quick notes)
  • Use “Keep-Cut-Start” on your to-dos
  • Choose your top 3 goals
  • Write them down
  • Block time to get them done

Do it for 4 weeks. Don’t aim for perfect. Just show up.

Final Thought

Weekly re-prioritising isn’t trendy. It’s not shiny. But it works. It gives you clarity, control, and energy. You stop reacting and start deciding.

I’ve used this system through acting gigs, volunteer shifts, community drives, wife, mother, and creative slumps. It’s simple. It’s flexible. It’s real. And if you’re juggling many roles like Bobbie Mangini does actor, organiser, giver it’s the kind of tool that keeps your life moving forward, one solid week at a time.

henry

henry

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