Making the most of your spare time: Creating the working day and working week you want

Making the most of your spare time: Creating the working day and working week you want

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Spare time, what spare time!?

For many of us, when we have been in full-time permanent employment, often in demanding roles for an extended period, we just don't know what we want to do with our spare time – we have never had any!?

When we are on holiday, it's precious time to be with family, travel, and, most importantly, recover. During the rest of our working lives, spare time may be an evening out once a week, taking the kids out for football on a Saturday or a Sunday, an opportunity to catch up with the gardening or DIY, or an occasional visit to relatives. However, we are fitting these things into a very small amount of spare time.?

I remember my wife complaining that the only time I was ever ill was over Christmas. The two-week break gave me 'permission' to recover, and the best way to check out was to have 'the flu’.?

Rethinking your spare time?

There are 168 hours in a week. On average, you might get seven hours of sleep a night: 49 hours, and you have 119 hours left. If you are working from 8 am to 6 pm five days a week and travelling means you leave the house at 6:30 and get home at 7:30, that will consume 65 hours. Add in some work at the weekend, evening meetings or business travel, and the average quickly becomes 75 hours a week. You have 51 hours left. One hour in the morning before you leave for work: 46 hours left. Three hours in the evening on a weekday: 31 hours left.??

What were you doing with those three hours in the evening? Perhaps an hour for a meal, TV, social media, or an occasional night out.?

What were you doing with the 31 hours available at the weekend? The weekly shop? Taxi service for the children? Household chores? A lie-in or an early night? Church on Sundays? The discretionary time for socialising, hobbies or other interests is squeezed out.?

Twelve fee-earning days a month: dare to dream?

As a portfolio executive, you are now earning fees for about 24 hours a week. 144 hours a week are at your disposal.?

As a first step to working out what your free time is for, I would suggest that you start to allow yourself to dream of something different.? ?

Maybe there's an initial piece of time where you're catching up on the DIY, you'll bring the garden under control, and you're meeting more friends than you used to, but I would say don't just go with the flow. Start to be intentional about dreaming of something different. Is there some childhood desire that you've never stepped into?? ?

Have you wanted to:?

  • Write a book?
  • Learn a new instrument?
  • Join a band??
  • Go travelling??
  • Do more train spotting?
  • Learn how to fly fish

What is the thing that you want your spare time for? If all you are doing is sitting around cluttering the house, you will become a burden to yourself and the people around you.??

This is not just about more business; this is about recognising that there are parts of who you are, who you were created to be, that have been starved, shut down and ignored for far too long and now you have the opportunity to do things that you'd love to do.? ?

Several Portfolio Executives I work with have gone on improv workshops to learn how to improvise – it has opened up a whole new world for them. Others have joined choirs. Many choirs out there don't require you to have an audition. Perhaps join a park run: an undemanding regular commitment to go out and do a 10K run once a week or once a month. Start visiting places, re-establishing your love for the theatre, eating out, and learning to cook.

Often, a big agenda item is more travel. We'll talk about holidays and travel in another conversation.? ?

Rethink Family Life?

How could your family life become different?? ?

Do you have an elderly parent, ageing parent, or parent-in-law with whom you haven't spent as much time as you would like? Perhaps you have become disconnected from them. Now is an opportunity to rebuild that relationship. I know that although the relationship with my parents had never been estranged, it did become increasingly important to set aside time to be with them and have conversations that would restore and strengthen the relationship in their later years. When they had a medical crisis, the flexibility of a portfolio lifestyle meant I could go and be with them. I worked from their homes, continuing to earn fees while being available to cook for them.? ?

Perhaps you have teenage children, and their needs are beyond the school activities programme. They need you to be around when they need to talk to you. By cooking, travelling, or just being Mum and Dad's taxi, you can have conversations when they are ready rather than at formal mealtimes.?

Re-think your Marriage?

What do you want from that most important relationship that you have got? Sadly, too many professionals I'm working with have found that their initial marriage or primary partnership broke down during their corporate working life. Are you someone who can no longer believe you'll ever have a life partner again? Are you determined that the second time around, you don't want to make the same mistakes as before? How can you be intentional about nurturing that relationship? How can you recognise that perhaps there are ways you can support one other, be with one another, and do things together that felt impossible when you were a full-time salary professional??

You could be like some of my portfolio executives who go into business with their partners. You must be prepared to adjust your relationship to work side by side, but it can be very rewarding. Perhaps you must look at the?five love languages?and recognise that how you offer love and experience love differs from how your life partner does. For example, whereas I value acts of service, my wife flourishes with words of affirmation.??

Think again about what you want out of your relationship. Think again about how you can strengthen and build your relationship. Consider sitting down and having some of those difficult conversations you haven't had for a long time about what you want out of sharing your lives together.? ?

Conclusions?

A portfolio executive workstyle can give you new freedom to maximise your spare time. The choice is yours whether to dare to dream and then carry the intention of fulfilling those dreams. Opening up those desires of your youth, making time for family and building a relationship with a life partner are all open to you when fee earning is only 24 hours a week.?

Kaur Lass

Calm pathfinder ? Leading Mind Health Revolution @ Wellness Orbit ? Visionary, securing high quality spatial plans @ Oü Head

12 个月

Those are solid points indeed, Charles McLachlan! While we cannot control time itself, we can certainly manage how we allocate our activities within it. This is why viewing life-work integration as a valuable concept is crucial - it's about living life on your own terms. We all have the same 24 hours in a day; what truly matters is how we choose to utilise that time, striving for inner peace and striving to be fully present in each moment. Portfolio executive lifestyle as many benefits!

回复
Chris Jones

NPQH FRSA FCCT l Chief Executive at SMARTcurriculum Ltd l 2024 BESA Awards Finalist l 2024 UNESCO Global Inclusion Practitioner l 2024 ERA Finalist l 2023 Digital Leader DL100 | Author | Achieve the Exceptional

1 年

It's a common struggle for many in demanding roles to find time for themselves outside of work. Prioritizing self-care and leisure activities can be challenging but essential for overall well-being.

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Robin Davis

? Game-Changing ? AI ? Advisory ? Strategy | ??Foundations First ??| ? Unlocking Potential & Impact in Leadership, AI, Governance, and Frameworks ? | ?? Integrating People before Technology & Process??

1 年

???? Sorry, had to laugh ????: "spare time" ???? It will be back and a more relaxed life will resume. However, "spare time" at the moment is "quality time": going out for a daily walk (listening to the odd podcast as I go), spending a bit more time on a meal, getting into a "flow state" on something I have really wanted to do but not had that window. It is surprising how time gets sucked out of the week with typical 'overheads'. You neatly avoided the bathroom component which I seem to remember was quite a significant chunk for some ??. I suspect that it rolled up into the 7-hour sleep ??.

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