Most of us don’t need another thing to do. Our lists are already crowded. Overflowing, even.
They carry errands and obligations, ambitions and anxieties—sometimes all mixed together without much regard for weight or meaning. And yet, we keep looking for one more thing. One more habit or system. One more tweak that will finally make the list feel right.
But what if the “one more thing” isn’t about doing more at all? What if it’s about doing something that changes the tone of everything else?
On my own to-do list—among the writing, the calls, the responsibilities—there’s a simple line that shows up again and again:
Make a difference in someone’s day.
Not as a project, a metric, or even as something that needs to be checked off with certainty.
[Just as an intention.](h…
Most of us don’t need another thing to do. Our lists are already crowded. Overflowing, even.
They carry errands and obligations, ambitions and anxieties—sometimes all mixed together without much regard for weight or meaning. And yet, we keep looking for one more thing. One more habit or system. One more tweak that will finally make the list feel right.
But what if the “one more thing” isn’t about doing more at all? What if it’s about doing something that changes the tone of everything else?
On my own to-do list—among the writing, the calls, the responsibilities—there’s a simple line that shows up again and again:
Make a difference in someone’s day.
Not as a project, a metric, or even as something that needs to be checked off with certainty.
The Problem With Adding More
Most to-do lists fail not because they’re inefficient, but because they’re incomplete in the wrong way.
They track outputs, obligations, and what needs to be handled.
What they rarely track is impact.
So we keep adding tasks that move things forward—professionally, personally, operationally—while quietly feeling like something is missing. We’re busy, but not always better. Productive, but not always connected.
Especially in quieter stretches of the year—those days after the holidays, when the noise drops and the pace softens—that absence becomes easier to notice.
Reflection has a way of doing that.
A Different Kind of Task
“Make a difference in someone’s day” doesn’t tell you how to do it. That’s intentional.
It might be one of the following:
- Sending a message you’ve been meaning to send.
- Thanking someone without a reason beyond gratitude.
- Listening—really listening—when it would be easier to rush.
- Offering help, encouragement, or simply presence.
It doesn’t require grand gestures. In fact, it works best when it doesn’t. What matters isn’t the scale of the action, but the direction of the attention.
Outward. Human. Grounded.
Why This Belongs on a To-Do List
At first glance, this doesn’t look like a task at all. It’s vague. Unmeasurable. Uncertain. And that’s precisely why it belongs there.
A to-do list shapes what we notice. It tells us what matters today. When every item is transactional, our days start to feel transactional too.
Adding something relational—something open-ended—changes the posture of the day.
It turns the list from a demand into a devotion.
You stop asking, “What do I need to get through?” And start asking, “Who might I show up for?”
Sometimes that “someone” is another person. Sometimes, quietly, it’s yourself.
Impact Over Accumulation
We’re conditioned to believe progress comes from accumulation: More tasks completed, more hours logged, more boxes checked.
But impact doesn’t work that way.
Impact comes from alignment—between what you do and what you value.
Making a difference in someone’s day doesn’t compete with your work. It deepens it. It reminds you that productivity isn’t just about output; it’s about effect.
You can finish fewer things and still end the day feeling fuller.
A Timeless Addition
This isn’t a seasonal practice, even if it fits beautifully in a season of quiet. You can carry this line into any day:
- A busy Monday.
- A difficult stretch.
- A day that feels ordinary and forgettable.
Especially those.
Because the smallest moments of care are often the ones that linger the longest—both for the person receiving them and the one offering them.
If You Add One Thing…
If you’re going to add one thing to your to-do list, let it be something that doesn’t demand urgency, efficiency, or perfection. Let it be something that invites intention.
Make a difference in someone’s day.
You may never know exactly how or when you did. And that might be the most meaningful box you never check.