I’ll take a stab at it. I won’t pretend I know how your workflow is, so I’ll 
share how I set up my tasks for moving from date to date.

1.      I don’t like seeing overdue ANYTHING. If I I want to do 10 pushups a 
day, but miss days, I’ll change the recurrence to 10 pushups every TWO days.
2.      If I want to fill the bird-feeder (haha I don’t have a bird-feeder!) 
today, but it slips to tomorrow, then my due date wasn’t today. My due date was 
actually tomorrow, or next week. I.e. my due dates aren’t wishes; rather, they 
are “real” dates. I put real in quotes because most due-dates aren’t even due 
dates. Taxes on 4/15th is a true due date. Fill the bird-feeder tomorrow isn’t 
really a due date. Heck, the birds can eat pine cones if I’m late 😊.
3.      For overdue tasks that are overdue only because I ended my day, I put 
those in a little bucket (typically a text tag, star, or folder) to indicate 
that they aren’t really overdue. Example: If I want to check email every 3 
hours I can do that. But not at 3 in the morning! So when I wake up and find my 
3-hour recurring tasks is overdue, I put that in it’s own little bucket to 
indicate it wasn’t my fault it’s shown overdue (Remember my default is #1 above 
for overdue tasks)
4.      I also use from time to time text tags to indicate HANDLING of texts. 
Like “1 Mission Critical”, “2 Goals”, “3 Active”, “4 Later”, “5 Whenever” would 
be typical. And my view would have “group by text tag”, to ensure that the 
stuff that needs to get done really gets done, and the stuff that can wait, 
does wait.

 

Maybe that helps you; maybe it doesn’t. 

 

Have a good week next week,

 

Michael Emerald, CFA

 

Performance Business Design

Owner, Business Strategy Consultant

(retired)

 

From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of imajeff
Sent: September 11, 2025 18:57
To: MyLifeOrganized <[email protected]>
Subject: [MLO] Re: Automatically Advance Date of Incomplete Task

 

I think instead of using the due date just to filter what shows up today, there 
should be better ways using advanced filtering. Your idea would not work for 
most because a due date is only important if it is actually the deadline.

On Tuesday, September 9, 2025 at 6:13:58 PM UTC-6 Adam Shulman wrote:

Is there a way to set a task so that if you do not complete it by the due date, 
it automatically moves to the next day until you complete it?

 

The scenario is that I have some tasks I want to complete today, but if I don't 
get them done, I want them to become the tasks for tomorrow, and the day after, 
etc. and so on.

 

My weekly/monthly review process would catch it, but not until I do the review.

 

Thanks!

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