out which tasks are highest on the list. Could you help me by pointing out the most important items when a handful need to be done? I’m sure it’s just me? but I’d really appreciate it, and I think it would help. Mara: Uhh ... I'll see what I can do. You: That means a lot to me. Thanks. Before I forget 22 last week’s presentation was excellent. Mara: Did you think so? Blah, blah, blah ... » LIFESTYLE DESIGN IN ACTION THE BEST TIMES TO SEND E-MAIL You’ve suggested people check e-mail only a few times a day. Here’s a twist: I reply to e-mails when it’s convenient, but I time it to arrive when it’s also convenient for me. In Outlook you can delay e-mail delivery to any time of day. For example, when I return e-mails at 3 p.m., I don’t want my staff instantly zinging me responses or clarifying questions. (This also prevents e-mail chats.) So I hit send, but it’s delayed to arrive later in the evening or at 8 A.M. when my employees arrive the next day. This is how e-mail was meant to be! It’s mail, not a chat service. —JIM LARRANAGA 14. To leverage global pricing and currency differences for profit or lifestyle purposes. 15. Information technology. 16. Don’t call it a problem if you can avoid it. 17. No one can argue with your feelings, so use this to avoid a debate about external circumstances. 18. Notice how I take “you” out of the sentence to avoid finger-pointing, even though it’s implicit. “Normally, you make priorities clear” sounds like a backhanded insult. If this is a significant other, you can skip this formality, but never use “you always do X,” which is just a fight starter. 19. Take a little bit of the heat off with this. The point has already been made. 20. “Before I forget” is a great segue to the closing compliment, which is also a topic shifter and gets you off the sensitive topic without awkwardness. Income Autopilot I » FINDING THE MUSE HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013889