For me, the biggest takeaway from David Allen's "Getting Things Done" book (which was hugely popular in the early 2000s) was that todo lists require aggressive pruning.
Otherwise they work well at first but quickly become giant guilt piles, aka "54 tasks remaining for the day" syndrome.
(Also then you never get the satisfaction of clearing your daily list, because it is one neverending eternal infinite list)
Which of your 54 daily tasks should be put on a "tomorrow" or "next week" or "next year" list? Which of them truly need to be done in the next 24 hours?
The total system he prescribes is perhaps a little elaborate, in many peoples' opinions.
Some people have great success with his system as described! I don't want to prejudice your thinking!
But I think perhaps 10x as many people found a lot of value from the principles he describes and adopting the bits of his system that work for them. (I am one of them) I'm just mentioning that in case you start reading and think "uhhhh this is overkill".
Otherwise they work well at first but quickly become giant guilt piles, aka "54 tasks remaining for the day" syndrome.
(Also then you never get the satisfaction of clearing your daily list, because it is one neverending eternal infinite list)
Which of your 54 daily tasks should be put on a "tomorrow" or "next week" or "next year" list? Which of them truly need to be done in the next 24 hours?