Home Surreal Photography Deadline. How does it feels like? Motivational quote without words.

Deadline. How does it feels like? Motivational quote without words.

Do your work and personal projects seem to drag on and on?

Deadline!

The word strikes fear deep into the heart of anyone who has ever owned a watch or calendar.

Think about the affect of the word.

Say it over and over again: deadline, deadline, DEADLINE!

We’re bombarded with thousands of distractions, facts, and information, each and every day.

While some of this is important, the rest is just fluff.

When you’re on deadline, you don’t have the time to deal with all those trivial matters.

You must instead focus your energy and attention to the task at hand.

You can’t afford to spend hours on Pinterest, chatting at the water cooler with your coworkers, or watching reruns on TV.

Now, this isn’t to say that these actions aren’t important; we all need a break now and then!

At this point in time, however, the deadline takes precedence.

You must focus your mind on completing the deadline.

You can do this by eliminating distractions such as switching off all electronic devices, or shutting your office door, and taking more drastic measures such as rescheduling meetings and appointments.

How to deal with Deadlines? Motivational Quote.

All of us felt deadline once in a life time. Need some motivation not to keep everything for the last minute?

Motivational quote without words or quotation. This surreal photography shows how you might I feel right now.

Deadline. Photomanipulation.

Deadline-Surreal-photoshop-Photo-manipulation-Man-is-holding-head-of-match-and-his-as-is-already-is-used-as-a-trigger-for-spark.
This will happen when the deadline will catch you. Surreal Art.

How often have you engaged in a monumental physical, emotional and intellectual struggle to meet or beat a deadline? The stress, anxiety, insomnia and general malaise that arise from focussing on this single word are almost beyond belief.

According to David Gouthro It strikes me as peculiar that so much attention is paid to a word that doesn’t seem to have any particularly positive connotations.

The dictionary defines deadline as a time limit and as the latest possible time to do something or as a line or boundary that must not be crossed.

And its root, the word dead, has definitions that include no longer living; that has died; without life; inanimate; like death; not active or productive; dull, stagnant, quiet; without force, power, spirit or feeling; no longer having significance, power or effect; no longer in use; obsolete; no longer functioning or producing; out of play; not in the game and not connected to a source of power.

Deadline is burning your a** already, what will you do?

Personally, I have a hard time getting passionate about meeting a deadline, given these definitions. And when you stop to think about it, what is “dead” about a deadline, anyhow?

Most of the deadlines I have to meet signal the beginning of something, not the end. Everything that came prior to the deadline was simply preparation for a more desirable beginning.

I propose we eliminate the use of the word deadline and replace it with the word liveline. To me, this word conveys a much more positive intention.

It’s something I’m drawn to. It reduces the stress surrounding the other word.

It has flexibility built into it, and the time boundary is now related to something I want to have happen rather than to something I want to avoid missing.

The “live” part establishes a connection to something that is generative, dynamic, and desirable.

It takes change into account. The “D” word often implies “do it or else”, and “no excuses allowed”. That word also denies an ever-changing environment that demands active responses that are appropriate and on time, not simply on time. How often have you gone full tilt to meet a deadline only to find out that circumstances relating to it have changed?

A little more attention to what needs to “live” might keep your efforts more widely focussed on an evolving environment rather than strictly on a looming, narrowly focussed deadline.

“Down with deadlines”, I say – and long live the Livelines!

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