Work Hard, Rest Hard
My friend Jonathan recently took a two-month sabbatical.? Over my standard breakfast at my favorite local bakery, he gave me the full debrief.? As I listened to his report, a powerful thought crept into my mind—“I need one of those.”
One Without the Other…
Work and rest are meant to go together. Work without rest does not allow for meaning and fulfillment. Workaholics don’t have time for reflection and course correction, and life has enough twists and turns that, without some pause, hard chargers eventually run off course.? One of my hobbies is biking, and I know that if I want to survive the ride, I need to coast down a downhill after a steep climb.? I can’t just keep pedaling with all I’ve got.? George MacDonald wrote, “Work is not always required.? There is such a thing as sacred idleness.”
On the other hand, rest without work also falls short and does not allow for peace and satisfaction. To be honest, it’s not even real rest if you haven’t worked beforehand.? That’s what makes a good sleep so good or a break so enriching.? It was preceded by hard work. I sleep hard when I’ve worked hard, and I’m not alone. A National Sleep Foundation study found that exercisers sleep better than non-exercisers.
Work and rest are married.?They’re not like a twin-engine plane that can fly on a single engine if needed.?They’re more like a pair of oxen—these two concepts must be harnessed together pulling your life in the right direction. If either one is unharnessed, success is impossible; the plow either goes wildly off course or crashes altogether.
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Finding and Maintaining Balance
I believe we are all designed to have a balanced rhythm of work and rest. Here are ten insights that have helped me recapture and maintain that sense of balance in my life’s journey. They’re not rocket science, but I’ve found their simplicity and clarity helpful:
On which side do you err? (It's no secret?on where comedian Jim Gaffigan errs.)Pay attention over the next seven days, then 30 days, and make a decision to balance out the scale for whichever side you are leaning. Get a plan to balance out the rhythm between restoring rest and meaningful work.
On a recent trip I sat behind two gals who were very loud talkers and had lots to say. I wasn’t creeping on their conversation—quite the opposite! I just couldn’t get my earphones in fast enough. I unplugged just long enough to order a Diet Coke and discovered they were still on the same topic and tone where they had started 45 minutes before leaving Chicago. Both were complaining about the pace and demands of their job. Both were exhausted. Both hated their work, their bosses, and their co-workers. Neither had taken a vacation in over a year. The pace was killing them. Their individual families were in chaos. Life was horrible. They were both in a spiral and they knew it.
Although most of us probably struggle, like these women did, with too much work and too little rest, the opposite does happen. Often, the lack of engaged work slips in quietly. We get lazy in our work. We stop sharpening our saw, as Covey coined it. Or we become obsessed with a hobby, and our value and contribution begins to slide in ?our work. We were all born with work muscles that must be exercised regularly. We have all heard of the foolish person who wins or inherits some money and they announce “No more work for me!” It rarely works out.
I need both work and rest in rhythm and concert. So do you.
Realtor Associate @ Next Trend Realty LLC | HAR REALTOR, IRS Tax Preparer
9 个月Great advice!.