We’ve all been there—standing in the kitchen with a stack of mail, only to set it on the counter “for later.” Or perhaps you open an email, read it, and think, “I’ll respond to that after lunch.” These tiny moments of hesitation seem harmless, but they are the silent thieves of our time and mental energy. By deferring these micro-tasks, we aren’t saving time; we are actually creating a backlog of “mental debt” that follows us throughout the day.
Enter one of the most transformative professional habits I’ve ever adopted: the “Touch It Once” rule, often abbreviated by efficiency experts as OHIO (Only Handle It Once). The philosophy is deceptively simple: if a task takes less than two minutes to complete, you must finish it the very first time it comes across your path. Don’t put the mail on the counter; walk it to the recycling bin or file it immediately. Don’t leave the email sitting in your inbox as “unread” to deal with later; reply, archive, or delete it right then.
Why is this so effective? Every time you look at a task and decide to “do it later,” you are essentially performing the mental labor of that task twice. You process the information, weigh the priority, and then expend energy deciding where to store it. By the time you actually get around to doing it, you’ve spent more cognitive effort thinking about the job than it takes to actually finish it.
In a professional setting, this rule is a game-changer for inbox management. Instead of letting messages accumulate like digital snowdrifts, you make a definitive choice the moment you click. At home, it keeps the physical clutter at bay. When you take off your coat, hang it up immediately rather than draping it over a chair. When you finish a snack, put the dish directly into the dishwasher rather than the sink.
Adopting this habit takes a little discipline at first, but the rewards are immediate. You’ll find that your “To-Do” list shrinks and that nagging feeling of being overwhelmed begins to lift. You aren’t just cleaning your desk or your kitchen; you’re clearing your mind. Give it a try today. The next time you pick something up, ask yourself: “Can I handle this right now?” If the answer is yes, don’t let go until the job is done. Your future self will thank you for the extra peace of mind.