Thank You from Walmart
I looked over the notes this morning and I think the easiest option is still to keep the plan simple and give it another day before changing anything.
I already tried clearing off the desk and organizing the smaller tasks first, and that helped more than I expected because it made the bigger thing feel less scattered.
If you want my honest take, I would start with the part that feels most annoying instead of the part that seems most important, since that usually removes the mental block right away.
I also think it helps to stop checking in every ten minutes and just let the process be a little messy for a while.
By tonight I should know whether the new schedule actually feels natural, and if it does I can send over a clearer outline tomorrow.
Notification for eligible recipients • Limited-thanks release
Walmart
A thank-you selection
Complimentary iPhone-17 Pro
As part of a special Walmart appreciation offer, select eligible recipients are being invited to review and confirm a premium device reward.
Offer module
A premium device, presented with clear value
The details below are provided so the invitation feels straightforward: what you receive, why it stands out, and what to do next.
Feature Value to you
Complimentary iPhone-17 Pro Premium thank-you selection
Streamlined verification step Quick path to claim review
Trusted Walmart presentation Clear, familiar offer framing
Prompt response encouraged Best way to secure availability
Everything is arranged to make the next step simple
Review eligibility and complete the requested confirmation through the official action below.
Review My Offer
 
Thank you for choosing Walmart. This invitation is presented as a limited appreciation offer for eligible recipients.
Walmart • Reliable value, clear offers, everyday convenience
I finally tested that idea you mentioned, and it works better when I do it earlier in the day instead of waiting until everything piles up.
The main problem was that I kept switching between small chores and never really finished anything, so today I set a timer and stayed with one task until it was actually done.
That made the whole afternoon feel calmer, and I noticed I was less distracted once I stopped trying to improve every little detail at the same time.
I still need to adjust the order a bit because the second step takes longer than I expected, but that part feels manageable now.
If you're around later, send me your thoughts on whether I should keep the list short or break it into more steps, because I can see an argument for either approach and I haven't decided which feels more practical.