String Theory.

The Unified Theory of Living

Introduction

String theory is a living framework to take the positive activities you have done in your life and help you realise that if they were positive, why not do them again regularly. If you take the positive things you have done in your life, and string them together into a daily routine, you can put yourself on the path to accomplishing everything you have dreamed of. It is a means to remove excuses from your daily life. There is no longer a reason not to do something if time permits.

Positive things you have achieved also include things you may think you didn't succeed at. For example, lets say you set out to lose weight, either by dieting, exercising or both. Lets also say that you set some kind of weight goal. Lets then say that the goal was not reached, but some weight was lost.

The positives I'm talking about not only mean reaching a goal, but the progress made towards that goal even if not obtained. If you did lose weight, its a positive! Therefore, the means you took to lose that weight worked to some extent. That means, since it is a positive, there is no excuse not to do it again.

It is flexible. There is no rigidity in the framework to make it brittle. Time itself is fluid and you can adapt yourself to stringing in activities as time permits, including replacing, at any moment activities which time no longer permits due to current events.

It is self healing. If your routine is broken for any reason, it can be picked up again the following day. Or indeed, at any time in the future. Once time permits your focused activities to begin on any given day, they can be strung into their alloted time slot.

This is not meant to be a replacement for motivation or other philosophies you may be living your life with. It is meant to enhance those areas you want to focus on, in your daily life.

Steps

1. List all the positive things you have done in your life.

2. Break your day down into time. Such as morning, midday, afternoon, evening and night.

3. Break your day down into events. Such as 'before work', work, 'after work', weekends and holidays.

4. Connect the positive things in your life you've listed in step 1. with time slots and events.

5. String those positive things together where you can into a daily routine. The routine is flexible allowing any of your positives to be strung into the next time slot in your day at any time.