You're working on a personal project you are excited about, and you enjoy working on it, but you don't feel like working on it. Outside of a work environment there are no external forces to push you forwards, so what do you find are the most successful ways to sustain your motivation though a several-week project?
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Best of luck! |
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Dream!!! if you dream about your project, you will always feel motivated. The satisfaction I get after completion of the project is priceless. |
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beer and cookies best savored in small sips/bites, like side projects |
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you might want to refer to this: link text and you might want to start a blog to capture down your progress, so at least you can have a world wide audience :) |
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I have several projects that I work on. If I am out of inspiration on one, I can move onto another one for a while. Often I will spend a week or two working on nothing but project A, then a few days on project B, then nothing at all for a while, then project C, then back to project A, and so on... That's the great thing about being in control and having no deadline. At work, if I can't find a "good" solution to a problem, I still have to solve that problem by the deadline, so I have to do something about it even if it is ugly. At home, I can just sideline the project until the "perfect" solution pops into my head (sometimes months later). |
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Since I don't program professionally, I've become an expert in the field of personal projects :)!
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You need to create the forces which will convince you to keep going. This is pretty basic psychology, carrot-and-stick sort of stuff. Give yourself a reward when you reach a milestone - this may be anything you'd like but wouldn't normally get in the course of your life (ice-cream, bigger hard disk, massage from beautiful woman, basically whatever wets your whistle). And make the milestones small enough that there's continual reward for reaching them. |
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Set a schedule. If it is a several-week project, try setting a few milestones (perhaps 1 or 2 per week?) and try to stick to the schedule. Since there are no external pressures, try to pressure yourself. Good luck! |
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Grab a notepad and pen, write down your ideas, broken into small tasks which can be completed in 30-60 minutes each. You only need 5-10 tasks, don't be too ambitious - just a few features which would be nice to finish this week. Start coding the easiest ones first, and cross them off as you finish them. Measurable progress generates momentum, and a physical checklist is more stimulating than any app which can be minimized. |
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Here's what I do:
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