Time Management
August 26th, 2006
I recently attended yet another time-management seminar (I have attended several). I am happy to say that I am already doing practically everything the advisor presented including: keeping my work area organized, use a planner to keep prioritized weekly and daily tasks, and surrounding myself with reminders of my priorities. I can definitely say that I lead a much more productive, and less stressful life because of it.
The best time management seminar that I have ever attended and fully bought into enough to implement in my life is the Steven Covey’s “7 Habit’s for Highly Effective People.” When I first heard this seminar I thought: what marketing genius! They are making money by selling common sense. Of course I knew it was important to prioritize and write things down, but I never did. One thing that caught my attention was that if I mark off an appointment or reminder in a planner, I don’t have to remember it. So each morning, I spend 10 minutes with my planner. I write down the things that I need to do that day and any for the future days that I can think of, and check off the things that I accomplished yesterday, fowarding any left over tasks to today or future days if today is too busy. Then I prioritize the list. I really do have it down to 10 minutes a day, 15 minutes on Mondays (for my weekly list) and 10 extra minutes on the 1st of every month when I write down all of my meetings.
As things come up, I add them to my planner on the appropriate days that I need to remember them then I promptly forget about it. No worries, when I need to think about it, it will be in my planner on the right day. I put everything in there. Shopping lists, phone calls, kids games, project due dates. When someone asks me if I can do something this weekend or next, I just open my planner and can actually give them an answer. Needless to say, every weekend is booked through October and by the time October gets here, I will be booked through the end of the year.
Out of the “7 Habits of Highly Effective People”, the one that I have the hardest time with is “sharpening the saw.” “Sharpening the saw” means that I will take time to take care of myself so that I don’t end up burnt out. Unfortunately, if there are 300 things to do this week and I only have time for 250, the 50 things that get crossed off the list are always the ones that only benefit me (like exercise). I have taken the time to play volleyball every week and that has been great, it went in the planner so I don’t schedule anything else for that time slot. It is not enough though. An hour and a half a week is not enough time to sharpen a saw that is sawing 100-150 hours a week. It’s just not proportional.
After 4 years of college where I worked two jobs while taking 21 credit hours each semester and 12 credit hours in the summer, I though I would have plenty of time to relax and do everything I put off for 4 years. A year later, I find I don’t seem to have any more time than I did when I was in college. I have something going on every weekend. The oldest step-son is out on his own now, my step-daughter and the younger step-son are both off to college tomorrow. So I wonder if I will finally have some free time. By free time I mean the time and energy to do things that solely benefit me. I have found that when I do have some “free” time, I am too tired to go and do anything for myself.
Another great thing about having a planner: you can review it and see where you are spending all of your time. I think that the kids going off to college will free up at least 12 hours a week. No more taking kids to school, work, practice or friends houses. Hopefully the cat won’t mess up the house as much, and there will be a lot less laundry. I hope I can get into the habit of using those extra 12 hours to be my “free” time to “sharpen the saw.”
Despite my time-management skills, and the subsequent productive lifestyle, I always find myself wishing I had more time to… well to do more. There are so many things that I want to do, so many people I’d like to spend more time with, so may more books I’d like to read, more blogs I’d like to write, things I want to draw and paint. There are states and countries I’d like to see and oh so many mountains I want to ski.
So how about it… anyone else find their life is in hyperdrive despite the collected fascade they present to the world?
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2 Comments Add your own
1. Don | August 26th, 2006 at 10:18 pm
I’ve been a fan and user of the Franklin Covey products and seminars as well! I agree with you, sharpening the saw is probably the hardest part, but the rest makes life pretty easy!
Your “free time” will come when you SCHEDULE it!! That’s what your planner is for, to schedule it. If you went to the “Focus” class from Franklin Covey, you would find that if you aren’t hitting one of your tasks, such as free time, you schedule it so you force yourself to take it.
You CAN do that for your desired time off too!!
Pleasure reading your blog!
2. Kristonia | August 28th, 2006 at 3:56 am
Hello Don,
I have not attended the focus class yet, but I have taken your advice and scheduled some me time.
Starting tomorrow morning, I will be getting up an hour and a half earlier everyday to exercise. This is in my planner now. I imagine that my sleep schedule is going to change a bit but that will fix itself after a few days on my new schedule.
Thanks for the advice, I will try to get the focus class in as soon as possible.
I see that you are reading “The Sorcerer’s Stone.” I recomend getting the HP series in audio format as well. The narrator is amazing and it is great for long drives.
P.S. Interactive Digital Multi-Media, Inc (Formerly AV Books, Inc) sounds so familiar.
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