Boring To-Do Lists? Not If You Study Leonardo da Vinci
Managing a PhD, being a parent and running a blog, I’m pretty adept when it comes to adding things to to-do lists, but not such an expert at getting to the end of them. Is it possible to make our to-do lists a little bit less stressful and a bit more … exciting?
If, like me, you’re on the hunt for task management inspiration, then studying the work of Leonardo da Vinci will leave you with a new style of to do list.
A to do list with a little less stress and a bucket load of curiosity.
And that’s a list we want to actually get done.
Leonardo would not be out of place in today’s society, despite living around 500 years ago. He was a true pioneer in cross-disciplinary thought and artistic creation. For example, not only was he an incredible painter, creating the likes of The Last Supper and the Mona Lisa, he was also an incredible physicist studying anatomy, fluids and light.
If I could have half the brain of Leonardo, I would be happy.
Given his curiosity about everything he encountered in life, it got me thinking; did he have to do lists? And if he did, just what was on them?
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