|
Momorandum Archive »
Executive Momorandum
Time of Your Life
5/27/2010
- Time of Your Life
"Time," or a lack thereof, is an omnipresent
theme and obsession of busy modern
life, and certainly of a working mom's life. It rose to the top of one of
our past
surveys as the #1 thing you need more of. (And I'll give it blame for our recent Momorandum schedule)! So we had to raise an intrigued (and
maybe slightly skeptical) eyebrow when we heard about journalist and Executive
Mom Laura Vanderkam's
new book hitting shelves today, titled:
168
Hours: You Have More Time than You Think
Here's
the premise - and it makes a lot of sense: rather than look at time in the usual
way we block it, in 24-hour days,
if we think of time in terms of the 168 hours that
make up a week, that cycle is more reflective of the picture and pattern of our
lives, with important fluctuations day to day in how we spend it. And we
particularly love one of her underlying motivations for looking at time differently, which
is to debunk the maddeningly prevalent idea that women cannot do things like
have a "Career" and a "Family" all at once.
In setting
about to research the use of time, Laura had a couple of important revelations
which populate the book:
-
Those
who believe work and family are mutually exclusive have a misleading idea of
how people actually spend their family time now, and how that compares to
the past.
-
There
are some equally giant misperceptions about "work," including the fact that
we are all overworked.
-
Having
the right job matters, possibly more than anything else, in how you perceive the time you invest in it each week.
-
Focusing your time on your "core competencies" is not only a helpful way of
prioritizing work, it is an important way of prioritizing at home, and
determining what you can outsource (laundry, maybe?) in exchange for some
freed-up time to play with the kids.
-
We
don't spend enough time thinking about what we'd like to do with our free
time (of which everyone actually has some). And we can better use the bits of
time that get interspersed in our days for bits of joy.
You may not be moved to try to
grid all of your 168 hours as Laura suggests, but just raising your awareness of
how you time is spent across those hours is eye-opening and potentially
behavior-changing.
Now, of
course, you just need time to read the book...
Learn more
at http://www.my168hours.com/blog
or shop for 168 Hours: You Have More Time Than You Think
|