 All right, so I'm gonna show you my to-do list. And if you have a bunch of to-do list categories that you created at some point, what should you do? Should you organize everything? Well, you know, my philosophy by now, which is if you have created a bunch of folders in the past, you don't have to sort it all out. That's a rabbit hole that's gonna take too much time. What you can do instead is to take all those old folders, put it into a one big folder called to sort, knowing that you can always sort that out later. So to have some visual clarity. So I'm gonna do that right now with my own to-do list. So with to-do list, I have all these projects that I had a bunch of in mind I never use anymore. So I'm gonna click on projects. I'm gonna add something called to sort. I'm gonna put an asterisk so that it shows up at the top. To sort, it's gonna be a list. And I'm gonna add to favorites, okay? Just so that it shows up in my favorite section also. All right, to sort. And then actually, you know what, nevermind. Well, I mean, nevermind in terms of adding the asterisk because to do is puts everything at the bottom when you first created. And you can simply now drag things under the to sort. So I'm just gonna drag everything that I don't usually use on a regular basis under to sort. And this is how you can quickly put everything in one place, you know, put everything in one place. Shopping, whatever. I'm gonna put it in here, I'm gonna drag it. Oh, actually I cannot drag the shopping one because shopping one has other things underneath it. Let me see if I can drag the rest. No, I can't. So I can only drag the ones that aren't nested that don't have things nested underneath it. So that's okay. The shopping one, I can collapse that one. Personal, I can collapse that one. Guest, guesting, guest posting, put it in there, book I can put it in there, et cetera, et cetera. So this is how I can quickly get that done. I'm gonna do that later when I'm not on this call with you anymore. But I'm gonna show you the other thing in my favorite section here is that I have created a label called five minutes and a label called 15 minutes. So for any one of my tasks, and today I'm gonna show you my tasks today, hopefully nothing's too embarrassing here. Defrost soup, it's kind of funny. But anyway, I do need to defrost soup later. So let's say that this task will take me five minutes. So I'm gonna click on this task and I'm just gonna do an at five minutes because that's how you do labels and to do is you just put an at symbol and whatever the label is. So I have a at five M label, 15 and 15 M label. So I'm gonna press return after I do at five M that's creating a label for this task. I'm gonna click save. And this task has now been labeled five minutes. The other way I could do it, I'm gonna create a sample task. The other way I could do it to create it is move. I can click on this more task actions and I could label it somehow. Can I label it from here? No, I can't. So the way to label it really is to do at five M or at whatever that's how you do it. Okay, so anyway, I'm not gonna create this task. I'm gonna just get rid of this. And so once you've created the tasks, now you can go to the label, which I have, what I've also done by the way, I've created a filter. I've created a filter. Let me show you what this filter is. Whoops, I've created a filter called five M today. Where is it? Where is it? Five M today. And let me show you how to create that filter. So basically parentheses today, line overdue, which means anything that is today, due today or overdue, and the ampersand, parentheses P1 line, P2 line, P3 means any task that has priority one, priority two or priority three, the ampersand and then this label at five M. So this is how to create this filter. So once I've created this filter, what that means is that this filter will only give me the tasks that are due today or overdue that have the label five M that are priority one, two or three. Isn't that great? And I've put that filter in my favorite section. So that's easy for me to catch, for easy for me to see under favorites. And the nice thing is I can now see, you see under five M, under five M or next to five M, this is five. That means I have five tasks that are in that filter as you can count there, one, two, three, four, five. It gives me that number five right there. I can't, right next to five M, which means I have five tasks today that take me about five minutes, which means that's 25 minutes of work. And then I have two tasks today that are labeled 15 minutes. That take me about 15 minutes of work. So I have total of 25 minutes plus 30 minutes of work for 15 minutes times two is 30 minutes. 25 plus 30 is 55 minutes. So I know that I have about an hour left of work today. So that's how I triage my tasks every day. I'm like, okay, what else do I have the left to do today? Which ones take me five minutes versus 15 minutes? I will label those so I can multi-select any task and label it that way, select anything and then label it using the labels tool up here to label it five minutes or 15 minutes. I don't really use the 30 minute one anymore because if I have a 30 minute task, I just put it on the calendar because it's 30 minutes. It's really a project, not a task. It's really more of a category. So that's how I sort out my to-do list every day is I first triage things by prioritizing them and then labeling them five minutes or 15 minutes. And now I know how much work I have left. Now, if I don't have, if I have more work, more things that I have time for, then I know I need to postpone the less important tasks for another day and I'll sort it out at that point. So yeah.