Start time blocking and take back control of your life-work-balance
Rowena Hennigan
Leading the Remote Work revolution ?Head of Remote @ Nosana ? Board Member, Keynote Speaker & Advisor ? [in]structor ? Remote First Pioneer
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Being a remote worker often means you have the ability to manage your own schedule. However, often we need reminded to harness the power of enhanced calendar planning and practices such as time blocking. Read on to kick start your healthy routine today >>>
In the good ‘ol days when we used to commute to a physical office at our start and end of the day are over. The structure based on that physical commute or travel to our work destination is now lost. Now, many of us can master and manage our own schedule proactively, planning each day with intention. Often, however, that schedule is dictated by work rather than your own NEEDS. Starting with an approach that reviews a calendar, placing work tasks first only makes it likely that you will fit your needs around work rather than truly placing yourself and your needs first.?Ask yourself:
"How can you practice life-work-integration if work is the top priority in your thinking and approach?"
Putting ME first in MY planning!?- Try this exercise - ask yourself, what would happen if your needs, health, family and social commitments came first into that approach to your scheduling. What would a week look like where all your lunches, breaks, self-care activities, like exercise classes and social commitments etc. were added FIRST to your calendar. I have often spoken about self-care seeming to be a selfish act and it is, but you won’t master self-prioritisation unless you do just that, put yourself first in your planning.
Two key steps to these are:
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Mitko Karshovski ???? , a successful Digital Nomad and Remote Worker for many years, recently shared he own personal calendar, which is a great illustration of self-discipline in this practice:
Enhanced calendar management via time blocking?- If you are already practising some of the tips laid out above, you may be interested in taking your approach to the next stage. Time blocking as a practice, is illustrated below in this image from Doist .
This method recommends you divide your workday into blocks of time, with each block dedicated to a specific task or group of tasks, known as task batching. Pay particular note to the significant blocks of time allocated, to support deep work focus and concentration. In essence, trying to avoid the pitfalls of context switching, potential distractions and interruptions and aiming to reach a “flow” in your work tasks.?The same article by Doist covers off the other ways to time block and batch, under the categorisation of day themes and also time boxing, suggesting these as alternative yet effective approaches.
Proactive calendar management and organisation is an evolving (and almost never-ending) task in itself, but I hope that you honour and set aside your time to review your calendar, prioritising your own needs first and blocking and batching work tasks with intention, like I do every Friday. Afterwards, the end result is a sense of satisfaction and clarity for what is planned for the coming week, safe in the sense that your own needs and wellbeing are a priority, reflected fully in your final calendar planning.
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Yes - and respecting other people’s time and it’s blocks help create a productive and stressful innovative environment where there’s time to think as well as be creative. We should all want to be part of that type of team!!!
CEO at Inspired Ergonomics | Global Ergonomic & Neurodiversity Compliance | TV Guest Expert | Reduce up to 40% of sick leave with our Ergonomics Software ??
2 年Nice article
Ecommerce Analytics Consultant | Google Analytics, Google Tag Manager & Looker Studio since 2016 | Question E-commerce Newsletter | A very special coworking Podcast
2 年My life is on my calendar. Everything is planned and reviewed to the 15 minutes. That's how I know I'm having a great go-to-bed routine this week :)
Relational Architect | Emergent strategist | Transformational coach
2 年I've been playing with an app called Motion for this and it works beautifully. It even plans for my ADHD brain.
Exploring how to thrive in the modern economy | Community Success Manager at GrowthCommunity | Cofounder at Cincy Scoop
2 年This is awesome thanks for sharing Rowena Hennigan (She/Her) And obviously I'm a huge fan of maximizing the use of a calendar and blocking out your focus time Personally, I've always struggled with being able to predict how long a task will take, and this method is helping me improve on that. At the end of the day I jot down some notes on how that went, did I underestimate how long something was going to take, what took longer than expected etc and that helps to inform how I plan for the next week