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Organize Your Family History

Stay focused and happy while exploring your roots

Getting started again after a hiatus

March 22, 2019 By Janine Adams 3 Comments

One of the things I love about doing daily genealogy research is that I never lose the thread of my research. I jot down next steps in my research log and then each morning I know just what to work on. No agonizing over what to research.

That’s how it’s supposed to work and how it does work when I’m in my groove. But, as I mentioned in a post earlier this week, I’ve done virtually no research for about a month. None. It makes me sad and it’s why I’m starting a 30 x 30 challenge on April 1.

Today I had a sliver of time and some motivation to get back in the saddle. But I faced a conundrum about what to work on. Most recently, I’d been working on eradicating the paper backlog I uncovered. But I’m away from home at the moment so I physically couldn’t do that.

It’s amazing to my how paralyzing the question, “What should I work on?” is. It can stop me in my tracks.

So I started thinking about the various strategies I could employ in figuring out what to work on today:

  • I could look at my research log to see where I left off.
  • I could work on processing my backlog of downloaded documents. (A small one has built up in recent months.)
  • I could open up my Source Documentation Checklist and pick up where I left off.
  • I could look at my follow-up notes, which I keep in notebooks by surname in Evernote.
  • I could choose an ancestor (any ancestor) and see what research questions I have about him/her and get started there.
  • I could look in my family-tree software (I use Reunion) and see if any of my families had a significant event today and work on them. (I wrote about that method here.)
  • If I were at home, I could play pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey and close my eyes and grab a pin on my ancestor map, then do some research on that ancestor. (That’s my ancestor map in the photo.)

Here’s the thing: it doesn’t really matter what I start working on as long as I re-engage with my research. The important thing is that I get the ball rolling and work on something. (Anything, really.) As my co-host Shannon Wilkinson and I discuss on our podcast Getting to Good Enough, perfectionism can really get in the way of doing what you love!

What I ended up doing was working on my backlog of downloaded documents, which allowed me to jump right in and make progress. It felt great!

Filed Under: Challenges, Genealogy tips, Organizing Tagged With: record keeping, source documentation, time management

Heads up! A 30 x 30 challenge is coming!

March 19, 2019 By Janine Adams 2 Comments

March has been a terrible month for me in terms of prioritizing doing family history research. And that makes it a bad blogging month for me because, of course, my research feeds this blog.

I know that the 30 x 30 challenge (in which I challenge myself and my readers to do 30 minutes of genealogy research or organizing every day for 30 days) is hugely helpful for me in prioritizing research.

So on April 1, I’ll start a new challenge. You can be thinking about whether you’d like to join me. It’s going to be a little challenging for me because I’ll be going to an organizing conference in early April and an out-of-town wedding in mid-April. But getting my research groove back will be really important if I want to maximize the benefits of attending the National Genealogical Society conference May 8 to 11. And if I can do it this April, I can pretty much do it any month.

You don’t have to commit now but keep an eye out for a post on March 29 announcing the challenge!

Filed Under: Challenges, Excitement Tagged With: 30 x 30, time management

How’d the January 30 x 30 challenge go?

February 1, 2019 By Janine Adams 15 Comments

Another 30 x 30 challenge has come and gone and I’m interested in hearing how things went for you. Folks are often in a great mindset in January to create new habits (I know I am), and I’m hoping that those who chose to participate in the January 30 x 30 challenge (30 minutes of genealogy research for 30 days in a row) found it beneficial!

So please, report in! I’ll start. Unlike last October’s challenge, this challenge for me was terrific. I was able to research each and every day and it was never a hardship. It helped that I had a lot of time at my desk this month (which I’m particularly grateful for because it’s been so cold out). And I think it also helped, for some reason, that I was also doing yoga daily. Something about combining those two daily habits was synergistic, I think. In any case, my research log is a thing of beauty because there’s an entry every day.

So what’s next? For me, I’m going to work on vanquishing the genealogy paper pile I discovered late in the month by spending 30 minutes a day with it until it’s gone. (That counts as research, in my book.) I’m not declaring a formal challenge but I’m hoping that I’ll work on it each and every day. Two months of daily research would really make me happy!

How about you? How’d your January 30 x 30 challenge go? Did you find it helpful?

Filed Under: Challenges Tagged With: 30 x 30, time management

January 30 x 30 challenge: how’s it going?

January 15, 2019 By Janine Adams 11 Comments

It’s January 15 already and it’s time to report in on our progress with the 30 x 30 challenge. Twenty people signed on for the challenge, which involves doing genealogy research (or organizing or whatever you choose to do) for 30 minutes a day every day for 30 days. I’d love to hear how it’s going! Have you been able to research every day? Have you missed some days but gone back to it? Have you given up? I’d love to know what you’ve accomplished and what benefits you’ve found to researching daily (or trying to research daily).

I’ll start! I have indeed managed to research every day. Over the weekend I even researched several hours each day (and blogged about how I lost my focus). It’s been so nice to make daily research a priority again. It makes me feel more connected with my research (and my ancestors). I haven’t made any startling breakthroughs, but I am giving Trello a whirl for keeping track of genealogy tasks and I look forward to writing a future post about how that is working out.

If you’re participating in the challenge (regardless of whether you officially said you were), please check in!

Filed Under: Challenges, Excitement Tagged With: 30 x 30, time management

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about me

I'm Janine Adams, a professional organizer and a genealogy enthusiast. I love doing family history research, but I find it's very easy for me to get overwhelmed and not know where to turn next. So I'm working hard to stay organized and feel in control as I grow my family tree.

In this blog, I share my discoveries and explorations, along with my organizing challenges (and solutions). I hope by sharing what I learn along the way I'll be able to help you stay focused and have fun while you do your research, too.

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