Moving Mountains - How to actually get stuff done
Too Long, Didn’t Read: The high level summary for turning mountains back into molehills
Step 1: The Everything List (Mountain)
Brain dump everything that needs doing — no filter, just get it out of your head.Step 2: The Weekly List (Boulders)
Break big tasks into smaller ones that can be done within a few days. Prioritize and identify dependencies.Step 3: The Daily List (Stacked Stones)
Choose realistic, bite-sized tasks for each day. If it’s too big for one day, split it up.Step 4: The Moment List (Pebbles)
Create a tiny, doable to-do list for right now. Each item should be completable in one sitting.Cross it off
Physically mark tasks as done — this builds trust in yourself and trains your brain for momentum.Celebrate your wins
Daily and weekly celebration boosts motivation and reinforces progress.Ask for help if you’re stuck
You don’t have to do it all alone. Support systems work!Take off more than you add
Even small progress counts. One stone at a time is still movement. Ignore that impulse for perfection.
Turning a Mountain Into a Molehill: A Practical Guide to Getting Things Done Without the Overwhelm
Ever looked at your to-do list and thought, “Wow, that’s just… a bit too much?” That looming mountain of tasks can feel impossible to scale. But here’s a mindset shift: you don’t move a mountain. You move it one stone at a time.
Let’s turn that mountain into a pile of stones you can actually lift. The key is breaking big, overwhelming tasks into smaller, manageable actions. Here's a four-step system to help you get from stuck to steady.
🪨 Step 1: The Everything List (A.K.A. The Mountain)
This is the brain dump. Every single thing that needs doing - personal, professional, errands, creative ideas, future plans - all of it goes here. Don’t worry about organizing yet. The goal is to externalize the overwhelm and get it out of your head.
Once it’s all out on the page, try sorting it into categories like “home,” “work,” “relationships,” or “health.” Whatever helps reduce the chaos. You can also rank them by priority, if that helps.
🪨 Step 2: The Weekly List (Boulders)
This is where we start breaking down the mountain into more manageable chunks. Scan your Mountain list and make a rough guess on how long each task might take. If something looks longer than a week, break it down further. Keep creating more tasks until each one takes less than a week. “Write a book” becomes “outline the chapters.” “Clean the garage” becomes “organize the storage bins and the tool shelves.” Each task here should feel doable within a few days, maximum.
This is also a great phase to prioritize, identify dependencies, and recognize deadlines. But remember at this stage, it’s still too big to act on directly. We’re not done breaking things down yet.
🪨 Step 3: The Daily List (Stacked Stones)
This is where weekly tasks are turned into bite-sized goals for the day. Think: “call dentist,” “prep slides,” “put cleaning chemicals away.” You can even rank them by necessity, like must-do, nice-to-do, or bonus if it happens.
If it still feels too big, keep slicing. “Clean apartment” becomes “vacuum bedroom” and “put away laundry.”
Each item should feel like something you can and will finish today. And all the tasks you identify for today should realistically be doable within the day. If the list feels too heavy, spread the load across a few days.
🪨 Step 4: The Moment List (The Pebbles or the Molehills)
This is the actual to-do list you work from in the moment. The now list. These are tasks you can complete in one focused sitting: one effort, one hour long sprint, one breath, one cup of coffee.
Include everything here, not just the “productive” stuff. Walk the dog. Drink water. Meditate. Shower. Eat lunch. Text your friend back. These count. Life admin is real work.
Once you’ve got your list? Do the thing. One thing. Then the next. And the next.
✅ Cross It Off (Yes, Physically)
Every time you cross something off, you’re doing more than just completing a task, you’re training your brain. You’re showing yourself that you are someone who takes action, who follows through, who gets things done. And that builds trust.
At the end of the day, review your list. Celebrate. Yes, even the little stuff. Especially the little stuff. Celebration increases dopamine in the moment, improving continued motivation, and serotonin when you see the completed list, creating a sense of satisfaction, which improves rest and recovery. Celebration makes it all feel like less of an endless grind and shows your brain that yes, it all adds up and you are going somewhere.
At the end of the week, look back at your crossed-off graveyard of tasks. It’s proof that you are indeed moving the mountain. And more importantly, that it’s working. You are actually moving that mountain, stone by stone.
💡 Bonus Wisdom
If at any point you feel stuck, foggy, or overwhelmed, ask for help. Have someone sit with you, listen to your list, and help sort the stones. You don’t have to build your system alone. You can ask for a remote accountability buddy, a sit-in co-regulating coworker, or even someone to directly help you sort things out. Body doubling works, and co-regulation is a thing. Just make sure that your accountability resources don’t turn into distractions.
And most importantly, remember:
If you take more off the mountain than you add to it, that’s a win for the day. It’s not about perfection. It’s about consistency. And if you miss, don’t miss twice.
So next time the mountain looms, don’t panic. Break it down. Pick a stone. Move it. Then pick another. And watch that mountain slowly shrink.
You’ve got this. One stone at a time.