Time Management Information |
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10 Ways to Take Back Your Time
I've divided my tips into two sections - 5 ways to manage your time and 5 ways to take back your time. Both offer daily or regular practices to try out in your life right now. The first section focuses more on easing the time pressures in your life, to deal with all of the things you've gotten yourself into ;) The second section focuses on making overall changes to your life. When you take back your time you also take back your CHOICE. When we're feeling time pressured and stressed out it's easy to forget that we have any say in the matter. And we do! 5 WAYS TO MANAGE YOUR TIME 1. Choose specific times to look at email during the day - seeing emails as they come in can really distract you from what you're trying to accomplish and you'll end up losing time as you go back and forth between activities. 2. The 15-minute strategy. This not only helps motivate you by breaking down large jobs into smaller pieces, it also makes good use of your time. The strategy is to spend 15-minutes on a task and then move on the next. You can come back to the first one as many times as you need to until it's done. 3. Find a system that works for you for making and meeting deadlines and appointments - a calendar or day-timer. I use a Palm Pilot and have been really happy with it. 4. Plan and cook meals ahead of time. A huge time-saver and also makes it much easier to eat healthier. It could be as simple as cooking an extra portion of dinner and having it for lunch the next day, or you could plan out seven days at a time (which is what I do). 5. Keep up with things - whether it's tidying up your papers, doing the dishes or working on a report, doing things a bit at a time (see tip #2) instead of letting them pile up to the point of taking you all day, is much more manageable. 5 WAYS TO TAKE BACK YOUR TIME 1. Set and keep your boundaries - if you work for someone else, be clear about over-time and taking work home with you. If you work for yourself, establish the times of day that are no-work zones; good places to start are breaks for meals and deciding when you will start and stop work for the day. 2. Make one day a week "timeless" ? rise and shine when you feel like it, eat when you're hungry and let your inner child (or your actual child!) plan your day's activities. Warning: This may conflict with the tip below ;) 3. Cut your t.v. time - try limiting it to one hour per day. Or try cutting it out completely for one week. 4. Buddy up and find someone to take back time with. Whether it's your spouse, best friend, family member or work colleague, if you're both committed you won't let each other bow out. 5. Take your holidays! Whether you're self-employed or work for someone else it's important to take time off to rejuvenate. You will be more productive for it in the long run. Where do you need to take back time in your life? Where do you need to manage your time better? (c) Copyright 2005, Genuine Coaching Services. Linda Dessau, the Self-Care Coach, is the author of "The Everyday Self-Care Workbook". To receive one of her free monthly newsletters, subscribe at http://www.genuinecoaching.com/newsletter.html
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Time Management: 11 Tips Work more efficiently and be more productive using these time-management tips: Doing Things We Dread As I sit here in front of the computer I am breaking through on something that I have been tolerating for weeks now? actually sitting down to write this newsletter.� I wasn't blocked for ideas ? I had a list of them.� I simply couldn't (yea right? wouldn't) sit down and put my thoughts on paper.� The irony, of course is that I coach people through these very same issues and my clients have great success.� Ohhhh coach heal thyself!� Well the breakthrough came the other night when I was using a wonderful miracle of modern technology? The George Forman Grill!� Let me explain. � I love to cook.� It is an amazing creative experience for me? and let me give you some advice? remember presentation is everything.� A meal can go from fair to fantastic simply by arranging the food on the plate? you sort of fool people into thinking it is actually better than it is? the French have known this for years.� But I digress? � So I was in the mood to make a nice meal but didn't want to go to a lot of trouble.� Enter the GF Grill.� Its very fast and the food turns out great.� BUT I HATE TO CLEAN IT.� Trust me, it is NOT hard to clean, but it is one of those things that I dread.� After previous uses I have let it sit there unclean for a full day simply because I "didn't wanna!" This time it was different, however.� After the meal, I simply got up, did the dishes quickly and then took the 4 � minutes it actually takes to clean the grill so it can be put away.� As I was doing this I realized that I wasn't dreading it.� What�was that about?� I usually piss and moan about it and work myself up into a frenzy.� Then I realized what was different.� I didn't think about it I just did it.� I knew I didn't want to wake up to a filthy kitchen, I knew it would take all of 5 minutes to do? and I did it.� I was actually grateful that I had used such a simple machine and was so happy when it was all done.� Perspective.� I had wasted so much energy with the dread of the action that the cost of not doing it was 10 times more expensive than the 5 minutes of the unpleasantness ? which, by the way was nowhere near as unpleasant as I was making it in my head. � From this lesson I today now sit down and write my newsletter.� I was dreading the time it would take; would it be good; all the what if's; all the mind games; the I CAN'Ts; all that crap.� Instead? it is simple? I will or I won't.� My choice. (By the way? this newsletter took about 25 minutes to write? hmmm? much less than I imagined!) � A Call to Action and a How to. � 1) Realize how much energy avoiding things we "don't wanna" do is costing us energetically. � 2) Realize that these things almost always seem bigger in our headsw than they actually are. � 3) Switch from victim mode: go from "I Can't" to "I Choose Not to."� As Yoda from Star Wars says? "Do or do not. There is no try!" � 4) Eat That Frog.� There is a book on over coming procrastination called "Eat That Frog."� A premise of this book comes from the� old saying, if the first thing you do each morning is to eat a live frog, you can go through the day with the satisfaction of knowing that it is the worst thing you'll probably do all day.� Identify the important tasks that you are dreading and just do them? right off? first thing in the morning and look forward to the freedom you will experience the rest of the day. � 5)� Make your 'To Do' list specific.� Vague goals engender anxiety and feel big and overwhelming.� Make them specific and measurable.� For example "Organize my life" vs. "Spend 20 minutes every morning sorting and filing the papers on my desk."� See the difference. � 6)�Categorize your to-do's by the resistence factor.�� Separate them into one of 4 categories; a) have to do / Want to do; b) Have to do / Don't want to do; c) Don't have to do / Want to do; and d) Don't have to do / Don't want to do.� Do your tasks in this order: b,a,c. � 7) To change your attitude, change your perception.� Make a game of it.� Create a chart and put up gold stars for every item you complete.� Feel good.� Play.� Is it all REALLY THAT important? � 8) Get support.� A friend, a coach, a group.� Don't face things you dread alone. � 9) Be kind to yourself.� One step and one thing at a time.� It doesn't all have to get done at once. � 10) Celebrate. For each accomplishment ? no matter how small ? celebrate.� Plan it beforehand and make it great!! � So what things have you been dreading that you will now choose to take care of? Go ahead.� Eat that frog.� I dare you to do one thing? just one.� Right now.� It will feel great. � Go get 'em, Tiger! � A Fatal Mistake that Can Cost You Your Business ? And More Whether you're a new business owner or if you have been running your business for several years, one of the biggest challenges you face at one point in time or another is overwhelm and imbalance. Are You Really Swamped or Just Disorganized "Time is what we need the most and what we use the least." Benjamin Franklin Expand Your Time In our time-crazed society, lots of time is what most of us don't have. Yet, all of us would like to have more time. So what can you do about that? Expand your time. It's simple. Make Procrastination Wait Reflect on the rewards of kicking the procrastination habit. 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Living Life In A Time Starved World Recently I saw an advertisement for a time management booklet: "Shorter deadlines, competing priorities, endless meetings, interruptions and even higher quality expectations are just some of today's time challenges. And yet the number of hours in the day remains the same." Prioritize with Two Questions "Because there will always be something more to do, we need to consciously choose what we are doing." How Would You Like to Capture Some Time? Women's health issues often are focused on goals to reach: getting thin, moving up in the corporate world, having a child, taking a vacation, meeting Mr. Right, fitting in exercise or making sure you are eating your vegetables! How You Can Double, Triple, or Even Quadruple Your Reading Speed! Are you drowning in a sea of unread papers? Do you feel frustrated because you cannot keep up with your reading assignments? You may have wondered if you should take a speed-reading course. Or can you learn to improve your reading ability by yourself? Overcome Procrastination - Discover ways to get more done in less time So What Then Is The Opposite Of Procrastination? Winning The Fight Between You And The Clock "Slaves to the clock" was the cover story in the March issue of CEO magazine. When Is Time Management Not Enough? A working manager needs more than time management. 24 Time Management Tips Where does your time go? We all know we are busy, yet we feel behind and don't get to do the things we really want to do. How Do You Start Your Day "Sunshine is delicious, rain is refreshing, wind braces up, snow is exhilarating; there is no such thing as bad weather, only different kinds of good weather." --John Ruskin 10 Time Management Tips for Busy Professionals If you feel like your life moves faster than a Nascar race, you're not alone. We are living in a time where dual income families and single parent homes are the norm, a sharp contrast to the happy sitcom families we grew up watching on TV. Time Management: A Fresh View Last week I had the privilege of spending some quality time with a dear friend. Unfortunately we live on opposite sides of the world, so we do not spend a lot of time together, but when we do get together it is an uplifting experience. |
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