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Date Everything: Why Adding a Timeline to Your Life Is the Ultimate Productivity Hack

In a world obsessed with minimalism, decluttering, and "living in the moment," the concept of dating everything might sound tedious, obsessive, or even neurotic. After all, why scribble a tiny month and year on a box of baking soda when you can just toss it? Why write the date on the back of a family photo when it is saved in "the cloud"?

Review: "Date Everything" Really Does Let You Date Everything date everything

Beyond the individual, dating is a discipline of accountability. In professional settings, undated contracts, unsigned proposals, and timestamp-less emails breed disputes. In journalism, undated press releases become misinformation. In science, undated lab notebooks render replication impossible. The date is not metadata; it is evidence. It says: this action occurred at this time, and I am willing to stand by that. A world that dates everything is a world that takes responsibility for its own chronology—and by extension, its own truth. Date Everything: Why Adding a Timeline to Your

Subtitle: The new productivity hack isn’t about organizing your folders. It’s about putting an expiration date on your reality. (List of representative references: RFC 3161, W3C PROV,

But when was the last time you put a "Best By" date on a goal? On a project? On a relationship?