> What if personal projects are not meant to be finished?
The key is deciding on 2 things before you start anything:
1. What is the goal?
2. How will I know it’s done?
With this approach you can start side projects purely to have fun for an afternoon or to learn a thing or to see how a technology or approach feels. Then you can drop it and move on. Goal achieved, thing learned, no need to keep going.
The worst projects in my experience come from unclear goals and fuzzy definitions of done. Those projects tend to drag on forever, burden your life, and fill up your days with busywork.
Note that it’s always okay to add additional goals to the same project once you’re done.
The key is deciding on 2 things before you start anything:
With this approach you can start side projects purely to have fun for an afternoon or to learn a thing or to see how a technology or approach feels. Then you can drop it and move on. Goal achieved, thing learned, no need to keep going.The worst projects in my experience come from unclear goals and fuzzy definitions of done. Those projects tend to drag on forever, burden your life, and fill up your days with busywork.
Note that it’s always okay to add additional goals to the same project once you’re done.