In this
issue:
The impact of taking back just 15 minutes a day may surprise you.
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How Do
You Make The Time?
Take It Back
We all wish we had more time for something: to relax, to exercise,
to make progress on that important project, to spend time with
someone. As you manage the demands of daily life, it’s easy
to fall into the trap of waiting for big chunks of time to miraculously
become available. A better approach is to look for smaller windows
of opportunity that are within each day waiting to be tapped.
Here is something to try this week: Identify
a specific time of day to take back. Taking back means
that you will now use this time for something that is more beneficial,
enjoyable, or productive.
What portion of the day will you choose?
- How you start your day
- How you spend your commute time
- What you do with the first 15-minutes of your work day
- Lunch time
- Before or after a regularly scheduled appointment/meeting
- What you do with the last 15-minutes of your work day
- The first thing you do when you get home from work
- The first thing you do when you finish dinner
- The last thing you do before going to bed
What Can You Do With Just 15 Minutes?
Here are some examples from recent coaching conversations:
- Taking 15-minutes before work to stretch or do a mini-workout
- Using commute time to relax and listen to music
- Starting the work day with your two most important phone
calls
- Devoting 15 solid minutes right after lunch to creative thinking
on a project
- Taking a 15-minute break from work to talk with a teenager
who just got home
- Taking a 15-minute walk before dinner
Each instance above involves allocating a specific time of day
—essentially forming a new habit— and also being open
to the progress that can occur by consistently devoting
short periods of time to a certain activity.
Open Your Window!
This Week: Take advantage of what appear to
be meager slivers of opportunity. The impact of taking back just
15 minutes a day may surprise you.
Here's to you,
Notes:
See Also: Your
AM/PM Routine. |
Virginia
Kravitz, Career
and Life Coach, has always
had a fierce desire to be
in the full current of life.
She founded In
the Current™ to
help accomplished professionals
use their restlessness as
the door to something bigger
and to start living with
a greater sense of joy and
abandon. Ginny is a recognized
Life Blueprint™ coach
and authorized facilitator
of the Now
What™ career and
life direction program, as
well as an authorized trainer
of the OASIS
in the Overwhelm strategies.
Visit at: www.InTheCurrent.com
Current of Life
is an e-zine for accomplished
people who want passionate,
fulfilling lives. Published
every other Tuesday, each
issue provides you with an
inspirational gem: a practical
tip, an insight from a real
life story, or a call to
action. Read prior issues
here.
© 2009, Virginia M. Kravitz. All Rights
Reserved.
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this article to others, provided
it is without any alteration.
To request permission to
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write to: reprint@inthecurrent.com
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