Exception-handling protocol to restore task selection

Scope: Human Unit task allocation protocol.
Trigger condition: When the Human Unit has failed to select a task, the Task Ordering Procedure (TOP) is applied.

Purpose

TOP is an exception-handling protocol rather than a routine planning procedure. The purpose of TOP is to restore task selection and return the Human Unit to execution mode. Where a predefined routine provides a clear next action, prioritization should be bypassed and execution should proceed immediately.

Activation conditions

TOP is activated only when the Human Unit reaches a task-selection failure state, including:

  • No task selected within the current context
  • Multiple tasks competing for execution
  • Planning activity exceeding acceptable duration
  • Inability to determine a clear next action

Procedure

  1. If a predefined routine exists, execute the routine task list.
    • TOP shall not be invoked unless the routine fails to provide a clear next action.
  2. Gather all candidate tasks.
    • Human Unit shall cease searching for the perfect plan.
    • Remove tasks that:
      • cannot be started to-day
      • depend on unavailable resources
      • exist only as vague life ambitions
  3. Human Unit shall categorize all remaining tasks:
    • RED. Urgent. Failure causes damage.
    • YELLOW. Creates future opportunities. Failure causes inconvenience.
    • GREEN. Merely interesting. Failure causes disappointment only.
  4. Tasks in category GREEN are temporarily exiled.
  5. Select the highest-priority RED task.
    • If multiple RED tasks exist, select the one with the nearest deadline.
    • If no RED tasks exist, select a YELLOW task that moves life forward.
  6. Record selection.
  7. Human Unit loses appeal rights upon recording the selection.
    • All non-selected tasks are deferred until the next review cycle.
  8. Proceed to Task Initiation Procedure (TIP) if required.

Task Selection Rule

  • A task chosen imperfectly is superior to a task analyzed perfectly
  • Suppress the compulsive desire to hold another planning meeting
  • Once a task is selected, the Human Unit shall cease strategic discussions and commence primitive motor activity

Non-compliance behavior options

  • Pause
  • Physical reset
  • Low-cognitive maintenance activity

Relevant authors (and references)

  • David Allen, Getting Things Done → task capture / processing
  • Daniel Kahneman, Thinking, Fast and Slow → cognitive overload and prioritization failure
  • BJ Fogg, Tiny Habits → initiation friction reduction
  • Charles Duhigg, The Power of Habit → behavioral automation