Why Project Steps?
Some brief summary of what I've been talking about recently here and why:
I've been trying to explain how to organize projects using steps so that people can gain conscious control over their lives. Making things consciously-controlled allows rational improvement instead of living by intuition and static memes. I've also talked about how and why to practice.
If you want to learn about conscious, rational steps to organize projects, that process should involve some discussions and questions about the steps as well as practice. The practice should start with projects that are easy so the focus can be on the steps themselves rather than the contents of the project. If you learn the steps enough to use them successfully several times, then you could try them out on a more challenging project and see if you're still able to use them in that harder situation, if they're helpful, etc.
I've been trying to explain how to organize projects using steps so that people can gain conscious control over their lives. Making things consciously-controlled allows rational improvement instead of living by intuition and static memes. I've also talked about how and why to practice.
If you want to learn about conscious, rational steps to organize projects, that process should involve some discussions and questions about the steps as well as practice. The practice should start with projects that are easy so the focus can be on the steps themselves rather than the contents of the project. If you learn the steps enough to use them successfully several times, then you could try them out on a more challenging project and see if you're still able to use them in that harder situation, if they're helpful, etc.
If I work on a hard project then I have to remember all its steps. I might not be sure on all the steps or I might forget some.