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Parkinson’s Law — Why Work Expands (and How to Stop It)

Ever sat down to “polish a draft” and looked up an hour later still polishing? That’s Parkinson’s Law: work expands to fill the time available for its completion. The trick isn’t more willpower—it’s smaller, smarter constraints that keep the task from growing.

What Parkinson’s Law really means

When a task has vague scope and plenty of time, your brain turns “send the email” into “perfect the message, find the ideal phrasing, re-check attachments, maybe redesign the deck.” Time makes room; the work grows to fill it.

Why tasks silently bloat

  • No clear finish line: “Make it better” has no end.
  • Open-ended time: with a free morning, “quick” becomes sprawling.
  • Perfection drift: quality targets creep upwards without benefit.
  • Too big a canvas: ten tools and five tabs invite detours.

The 3C antidote: Clock, Canvas, Criteria

Use these three constraints together. No software needed.

1. Clock: short, visible time box

Set a 25–30 minute block (or 15 if you’re tired). When the clock ends, you stop, decide next step, and either ship or schedule a small follow-up.
Why it works: urgency trims the fluff and forces choices.

Example: “Draft the email outline in 25 minutes. Send if solid; otherwise schedule 15 minutes at 2 pm to refine.”

2. Canvas: shrink the surface area

Give the task less space. One page. Three bullets. A single slide.
Why it works: a smaller canvas prevents wandering.

[Suggested Image: A single A5 dotted page titled “Brief: 200 words max”.]

3. Criteria: define “done” before you start

Write three conditions that, if met, you’ll call it done.
Why it works: a finish line stops perfection drift.

Example: “Done when: (1) decision is clear, (2) numbers match source, (3) tone is polite and concise.”

A one-week experiment (no apps)

  • Day 1–2: Pick one task each morning. Apply Clock (25m) + Canvas (one page) + Criteria (three points).
  • Day 3–4: Add a 2-minute start action (write the first sentence, list three bullets, or dial the number).
  • Day 5: Review: Which criteria felt strict enough? Where did time spill? Adjust your 3C for next week.

Optional picks (cards, not tutorials)

  • Analog TimerBegin without thinking about it
    Best for: 25–30 minute focus blocks
    Why we like it: tactile, glanceable, zero setup
    Keep in mind: choose a quiet tick in shared spaces
    Price note: $
  • A5 Dotted NotebookOne page = smaller canvas
    Best for: briefs, three-bullet outlines
    Why we like it: flexible grid, folds flat
    Keep in mind: snap a photo if you need backup
    Price note: $
  • Index CardsSingle decision per card
    Best for: defining “done” criteria
    Why we like it: forces brevity; easy to reorder
    Keep in mind: discard daily to avoid clutter
    Price note: $

Common pitfalls (and quick fixes)

  • Time box without a finish line: add Criteria or you’ll just watch the clock.
  • Oversized canvas: if you open five tabs, your task will expand; return to one page.
  • Perfection loop: when your three Criteria are met, ship. Add improvements later.

Conclusion (CTA)

Try the 3C method tomorrow morning on one task that usually sprawls. Set a short Clock, shrink the Canvas, and write three Criteria before you start. If you finish faster with equal quality, keep it for a week and adjust the dials to your style.

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