One helpful feature common to websites is the ability to specify one or more topics or categories an items fits in. Another name for this is "tagging". It allows a built-in type of indexing for the site. If an article interests you, just click the "tag" to see others on similar topics.
At this site begins, I struggle to "tag" various items since most seem to fit in a dozen or more categories. And it's not because the items are usually very broad in scope. It's because all of life is connected and all areas touch all other areas. One could say "every good path" crosses "every other path" to stay with the theme of this site.
For example, an article on success at the workplace could have some simple ideas for better organizing your work. But in the true scope of life, if you step back and ask basic questions about the situation at hand you see it immediately intersects all areas of life. If you refuse to consider your life as a whole, your solution for improvement in your office may be unworkable. Will the changes require learning to use new tools? This touches education and technology. Will the changes alter your work hours? - possibly impacting your exercise schedule and thereby your health. How will the changes impact co-workers, touching the area of friendship, etc.?
Probing more deeply on the workplace question will lead to questions about the future - is this the job I want 5 years from now? Am I trapped in my current job due to monthly bills which are due to high debt which is due to unchecked material cravings which are due to following the dictates of advertisements taken in through embracing the media and entertainment, and so on? All questions of finance, materialism, popular culture, etc.
Maybe the job itself is the problem and you'd rather retrain for another vocation. How then would this affect your marriage? What about your kids? Questions of vision, parenting, marriage, etc. So the "minor" issue of workplace organization cannot be considered in isolation from all other areas. If a person has considered the lifesize context and is comfortable with that context, then a few changes in workplace tactics may be sufficient. But the person must be willing to think it through deeply to have the confidence that a minor change in tactics will really be effective and lead to general well-being, rather than just be a time consuming distraction wasting effort that could be expended on weightier matters that threaten far more seriously than a little inefficiency at the office.
The perpetually hurried soul may reply "Are you kidding? I just need to get that bill paid, before expenses are due for soccer camp, which comes the week after our cousins arrive, whom I still need to get birthday gifts for, once the car is out of the shop.... I don't have time to think through every action". Having played this game repeatedly, I can assure such a hurried one that the battle is already lost. Surely there are special times of busy-ness in any life, but if your lifestyle is a perpetual rush then retreat, regroup, redeploy is the order of the day. To hurry on is to play the enemy's game, which he will win every time.
So with the understanding that "every good path" intersects all others, a Topics list is provided to help organize the site. The Topic tag will indicate the primary matter discussed. But the secondary effects can never be safely ignored.
