š¬ Your Inbox is Not a To-Do List (Hereās What to Do Instead)
How I Automate Spark, Notion, and Meco to Keep My Focus (and Sanity) Intact
Letās talk about email.
Specifically, letās talk about how to stop your inbox from hijacking your entire day.
You know how this goes:
You open your inbox to send one email.
You get distracted by five unread messages.
Now youāre responding to things that arenāt even urgent.
An hour later? You still havenāt done what you meant to do.
And just like that, your deep work time is gone.
The Inbox That Wouldnāt Quit
For years, my inbox was like a petulant toddler. It wanted my attention constantly. It didnāt care what I was working on, how focused I was, or that I had a deadline to hit. The notifications were relentless, the unread messages were piling up, and before I knew it, I was drowning in emails that werenāt even important.
So I did what many people doāI tried to out-organize my email problem. I made fancy folders. I set up labels and rules. I color-coded things like I was running an air traffic control tower.
And you know what? It didnāt work.
Because the real problem wasnāt that my emails werenāt organizedāit was that email was running my day instead of me deciding when (and how) I dealt with email.
So, I fixed it.
Instead of using my inbox as a task manager, I optimized it to work alongside my actual productivity system. And now? I can manage 11 inboxes without breaking a sweat.
My Email System: Spark + Notion + Meco
First, letās talk about scale: I donāt just have one inboxāI have 11. (Yes, really.)
Between businesses, projects, and personal accounts, hereās what I manage:
indieauthormagazine.com ā All things IAM-related.
atheniacreative.com ā My consulting & automation projects.
authorventuresllc.com ā Author Nation communications.
Personal accounts ā Because life still happens outside of work.
Project-based emails ā Dedicated addresses for specific collaborations.
Why Spark? I use Spark instead of Gmail's app (even though I have Gmail accounts) because it brings all my worlds into one place. I'm big on having a big-picture view of everything, and Spark's unified inbox lets me see what actually needs my attention without bouncing between a dozen accounts like a caffeinated squirrel.
Enter Meco: I was drowning in newsletters and losing important conversations. My neurospicy brain would fixate on a newsletter, derailing my focus. Meco is a newsletter aggregator that moves your newsletters to a space built for reading, decluttering your inbox in seconds. Now, my main inbox only contains real, actionable emailsāno clutter, no distractions. I check newsletters on the treadmill, not during work hours.
Nerd Alert: Information overload is a real thing, and notifications often contribute to declines in mental health. Constant exposure to information can lead to confusion, stress, and mental fatigue.
How I Learned to Batch Email Like a Pro
There was a time when I thought checking email constantly meant I was staying on top of things. Spoiler: it just meant I was always distracted.
My inbox felt like a relentless slot machineāevery time I refreshed, there was a new "reward." A new email! A new fire to put out! A new question I hadnāt anticipated! And the dopamine hit? Oh, it was real. But so was the constant state of low-grade stress.
So, I tried something different. I forced myself to batch-process email three times a day. Thatās it. No exceptions. And you know what? My productivity skyrocketed, my mental load lightened, andāI kid you notāpeople started respecting my time more because I wasnāt always immediately available.
Hereās how I do it:
1ļøā£ Mid-Morning (after Maker Time) ā My mornings are sacred. I donāt touch email until after my deep work session is complete. No email before creativity. Period.
2ļøā£ 1 PM (after meetings end) ā This is my "check-in and respond" time. By this point, anything truly urgent has either resolved itself or escalated appropriately.
3ļøā£ 4 PM (before I log off) ā The final email sweep of the day. Anything that needs attention gets handled, snoozed, or delegated.
This one change alone gave me back hours every day. No more constant interruptions. No more inbox doomscrolling. Just controlled, intentional engagement with my email.
What I Donāt Do Anymore (And Why You Shouldnāt Either)
I donāt check email first thing in the morning. The second I open my inbox, my priorities shift from "what I planned to do" to "what other people want from me."
I donāt let email decide my priorities. My time blocks, my calendar, and my tasks in Notion set my agendaānot a flood of incoming messages.
I donāt check email at night. I close my laptop, and unless thereās a true emergency (which is rare), email waits until the next day.
If itās truly urgent? They can call me. And guess what? They almost never do.
My Triage Method: How I Process Emails in Seconds
When I check email, I donāt just read themāI act on them immediately. Because if I donāt? That email turns into another mental tab left open, slowly draining my brainās RAM.
I rely on Sparkās integration with Notion to turn emails into action. No more emailing myself reminders (we both know that doesnāt work). No more copy-pasting into a separate to-do list. Everything flows directly where it needs to go with a click.
Hereās how I make sure emails donāt just sit there, haunting me like an overdue library book:
If an Email Needs Action: It Goes to Notion Tasks
If an email needs action, I donāt let it loiter in my inbox like an awkward party guest. It goes straight into Notion Tasks. No exceptions. No "Iāll just leave this here to deal with later" (because we all know later never comes). If an email requires me to do somethingāwhether itās following up, making a decision, or sending something laterāit goes straight to my Notion Task Inbox. No mental juggling. No āIāll remember this laterā (because letās be honest, I wonāt). From there, I can:
Assign a due date
Link it to a specific project
Add notes or context
This ensures I donāt have random emails dictating my workflow. Instead, tasks live where they shouldāinside my actual productivity system.
If Itās Reference Material: It Goes to Notion Notes
Not every email needs a response, but some are worth keepingācontracts, decision threads, important resources. Instead of leaving them buried in my inbox, I file them directly into Notion Notes. That way, when I need to find that one email from three months ago (you know the one), Iām not scrolling through an abyss of āchecking inā messages.
If Itās Not Urgent: It Gets Snoozed
If an email isnāt urgent but needs my attention later, I snooze it. This means it vanishes from my inbox until the exact moment I need to deal with it. No clutter. No getting distracted before Iām actually ready to tackle it.
The Two-Minute Rule: My Personal Inbox Jedi Trick
If it takes less than two minutes? I reply, archive, and move onālike an inbox ninja. No hesitation. No "just checking one more time before sending" nonsense. Just pure, efficient email domination. My golden rule: If I can reply in under two minutes, I do it immediately. Then I archive it and move on. No second-guessing. No re-reading the same email five times before responding.
ā Why This Works:
Tasks donāt get buried in my inbox
Iām not keeping everything in my head (bad idea, trust me)
My email isnāt a to-do listāitās just a tool that feeds into my actual productivity system
PARA & GTD: Why This Keeps Me Sane
This system aligns with PARA (Projects, Areas, Resources, Archives) and GTD (Getting Things Done) because:
Tasks live in Projects (not floating in email limbo)
Resources live in Notes (so I can find them instantly)
Archives keep things clean (so Iām not hoarding emails ājust in caseā)
By combining Sparkās integrations with PARA & GTD, Iāve stopped letting email dictate my day. Now, itās just another tool that works for meānot the other way around.
Why I Donāt Use Sparkās Built-In Calendar
I gave Sparkās calendar a fair shotāI wanted to love it. But after a few frustrating weeks of wrestling with it, I had to break up with it.
Hereās the deal:
It doesnāt handle Google Calendar invites well. (And if youāve ever had to manually forward a calendar event to yourself just to get it to show up correctly, you know thatās a dealbreaker.)
It doesnāt integrate smoothly with my task-based workflow, which is non-negotiable for how I manage my time.
Instead, I use Notionās Calendar, and hereās why itās a game-changer for me:
It keeps my tasks in front of me, right where I need them. When Iām in my Maker blocks (writing, creating, deep work), I donāt want to dig through separate apps to see whatās due. And when Iām in Manager mode (meetings, admin, emails), I need my schedule and action items in one place. Notion lets me link tasks directly to my calendar so nothing slips through the cracks.
It centralizes everything. No bouncing between apps. No hunting for Zoom links. No forgetting what a meeting was actually about. If I have a call, I can attach notes, documents, or a running task list directly to that event.
It keeps my workflow consistent. My tasks live in Notion, my projects live in Notion, my reference materials live in Notion. Having my calendar live there too? Just makes sense.
Your Action Steps This Week
If youāre tired of email running your life, hereās what to do next:
ā Try email batching. Set three times a day to check email and stick to them. No more all-day inbox refreshes.
ā Snooze emails that arenāt urgent. Use Spark (or whatever email app you like) to make sure emails show up when you are ready for them, not when they demand attention.
ā Connect your inbox to your task manager. If youāre manually copying tasks from email to a to-do list, integrate them insteadāyour future self will thank you.
š Paid subscribers: Donāt forget, I host office hours every Thursday at 10 AM. Need help setting up your email automations? Want to see my Notion system in action? Come hang out.
š„ Also, you can download my automation recipes for freeāincluding Spark to Notion workflows, snoozed email reminders, and meeting note transcriptions.
Hit reply and tell me: Whatās your biggest email frustration? I guarantee thereās an automation for that.
Until next weekākeep automating so email doesnāt run your life. š