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Home –› Self Help –› Time Planning
 

Eliminate Common Time Busters

 

"Life offers two great gifts: time and the ability to choose how we spend it. Planning is a process of choosing among those many options. If we do not choose to plan, then we choose to have others plan for us." Richard I. Winwood

Performing redundant tasks, putting your time into ridiculous activities, and wasting minutes here and there all add up to significant amounts of unproductive time over your lifetime.

Consider statistics, recently reported by time-management experts, that the average American wastes over his or her lifetime:

eight months opening junk mail

seventeen months drinking coffee and soft drinks

two years on the telephone

five years waiting in line

nine months sitting in traffic

four years cooking and eating

a year and a half grooming

a year and a half dressing

seven years in bathrooms

twelve years watching TV

three years shopping

one to two years looking for misplaced objects

24 years sleeping

We could come up with some pretty fun statistics on how much time mothers waste doing redundant tasks:

picking up stray toys

wiping kitchen countertops

scouring the sink

washing the dishes

doing the laundry

folding clothing

putting the laundry away

cleaning bathrooms

mopping the floor

collecting the garbage

changing diapers

changing crib sheets

wiping runny noses and dirty bottoms

getting little ones out of car seats

blah blah blah...does the list ever end?

In order to eliminate common areas of wasted time, you need to be constantly on the lookout for ways in which you might use time more effectively.

A few tips:

Stop watching TV...or severely restrict your tube time. Allow yourself to watch the evening news for one hour after the kids are in bed. Eliminate morning "fluff" TV and afternoon talk shows. They are minor on content and major on commercials and pure nonsense. Unless you're sick in bed or need to spend the day on the sofa, give them up.

Keep a lot of irons in the fire. Remember the old saying: "If you need something done, ask a busy person to do it." The busy person is always ready because she has momentum. Doers always have multiple irons in the fire, so new projects are always ready to be tackled when boredom or fatigue sets in with her current project. Don Aslett calls it "ship jumping." When enthusiasm wanes, a project gets boring, or we need to put a temporary freeze on a project for one reason or another, we jump ship, leave it, and move on to something else. Working this way, you become fast, efficient, motivated, and highly productive.

Lastly, think ahead. Moms who "stand ready" always thing ahead to the next probable scenario. Red traffic lights are not stops; they are pauses for reflection about the next intended thing. Carpool lines are not monotonous waiting lines; they are times to write or read or do one's make-up or nails or plot out the next intended thing. Ditto for doctor's office waits, grocery line queues, and gas station fill-ups. Rocket Moms use these as intentional "mental moments"--always taking in opportunities for action, planning the next intended event, organizing the rest of the day, or reviewing activities lined up for the kids.

Critically examine the ways in which you spend your time. See if you might find yourself surprised to find extra hours in your day...to take a bubble bath, write a letter, paint a picture, or read a great book.

Author: Carolina Fernandez
 
Author Bio:

Carolina Fernandez

Carolina Fernandez earned an M.B.A. before working at IBM and as a stockbroker at Merrill Lynch. She left the corporate world to work as a full-time wife, mother, and homemaker.

Coming home to longer hours, harder work, and more demanding relationships left her feeling totally overwhelmed. Granted, she traded one investment field for another which has yielded immeasurable returns heretofore unimagined. Nonetheless, her frustration at her lack of ability in tackling all of motherhood?s inherently difficult challenges pushed her into a nearly twenty year labor of love. Her research in child development, child psychology, social psychology, nutrition, and exercise physiology, along with indispensable insights and experiences gained along the way, finally evolved into ROCKET MOM!

She re-invented herself in the process. She has dabbled in the domestic, performing, and visual arts, undertaking projects ranging from painting in oils to hooking rugs to singing onstage in Carnegie Hall. She has developed strong convictions about the role of the arts in child development; these convictions have shaped the specific strategies played out in the book.

She has a passion for inspiring creativity in people of all ages, from pre-schoolers to rocket grandmoms! Indeed, she receives particular joy in helping moms on the front line as they engage in what is arguably the most creative challenge ever invented: motherhood. To this end, she writes and speaks extensively, and is constantly developing teaching materials in her effort to share the crucial intervention of creative nurturing in developing children. She shares her message via radio and TV interviews; print media; and in speaking platforms via seminars and workshops, lectures and keynotes for pre-schools, women?s groups, retreats, civic organizations and adult education classes. Her soon-to-be-launched cable TV program, ROCKET MOM! will reach thousands of households in the Fairfield County area of Connecticut.

Her newly-formed Rocket Mom Society attempts to meet her mission head-on as she ?encourages, equips and empowers moms for excellence.?

She lives with her husband and their four children in Ridgefield, Connecticut.

This article can be searched using: time management, time management skills, time management tips, time management tools
 
 
 

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