Articlexpo
Search:    Main :> About Us :> Privacy :> Terms of Use :> Add Url :> Submit Article   
 

A 2-Minute Stress Buster

Meditation seems to have arrived in the mainstream of late, and for good reasons. As reported in a 2 ... - Jill Ammon-Wexler
 

How to Motivate Yourself Forever

Just as willpower is an essential factor in achieving success, at some point in time, discouragement ... - Daegan Smith
 

How Do You Break This Bad Habit?

Waiting for things to happen is a bad habit that leads you right past a lifetime of opportunities to ... - Steven Gillman
 
 

Be Thankful

One of the first things I remember learning to say was ?thank you.? It didn?t matter how small the g ... - Debbie Gisonni
 

How To Discover Your Purpose In 15 Minutes

"Who am I, why am I here?" That basic question has been asked by every thinking person since the daw ... - T Young
 

A Person is Only Limited by the Thoughts He Chooses

It is a fact that one's belief system is ultimately responsible for whether they live a successful l ... - Daniel N. Brown
 

How To Identify Stress And Anxiety?

The first symptom of stress is that you are not a normal person, when you are seized with it. Your f ... - Javier Fuller
 

Why You Don't Need Motivation

As a life and career coach, I often hear people say they lack motivation ? in fact, the ?motivation ... - Marie-Pier Charron
 
 

Main » Self Help » Time Planning
 

Is Your Job Taking Over Your Life?

 
Author: Bruce Taylor
 

If you wanted to, could you really get away from work?

That sounds like a stupid question, but it's not. In theory, when you walk out the door at five o'clock (or six, or eight o'clock) your time is your own, to spend with your family or your friends, to read a good book or watch a movie, to see a play or work on your knitting. But you know how it goes:

  • Your cell phone rings and your supervisor needs you to come in right now to look into a system crash.
  • You feel that you have to check your Blackberry every ten minutes to see if you have any important messages.
  • You feel a strange impulse to stop in at the next Starbucks just to log into your email to see if there are any crises that need you.
  • Your secretary tracks you down at your vacation cabin at the beach to ask where the presentation files are stored.
It's getting harder and harder to actually disconnect from work, and may people feel that work has a call on them at all times - that they're never allowed to disconnect. Sociologists call this "work/life permeability" and there's a ton of research on its causes and its bad effects. I can summarize the research simply:
  • Being unable to disconnect from work at all means that you can never really relax and get perspective on your job - you're always in the battle.
  • If your boss can always call you, then there's never any time that you can promise your family to be available; and that weakens family bonds over time.
  • Part of the blame goes to our wired society and the communication devices that have become so necessary to you: cell phones and pagers and laptops.
  • Part of the blame goes to the business environment, which really does run 24 by 7 by 12 and experiences crises at inconvenient times.
  • Part goes to the new attitude of business that they're paying you a salary rather than by the hour, so they have a claim on your entire day.
  • And part of it goes to your own vanity, which wants to be reassured that you're indispensible to the business and that they can't get along without you.
None of these should be surprising, except the last one - that you are, in part, responsible for the electronic chains that connect you to work. Don't beat yourself up about this, it's part of being human and wanting to belong to a community - but you've carried it a little too far. So to fix this problem your're going to have to
  • Break all the electronic ties when you really want to get away: leave the cell phone at home, don't carry the Blackberry or laptop.
  • Tell your boss firmly that you're on vacation and you won't be available, even for emergencies, and then stick to it. Threaten your secretary if she tries to locate you at the mountain hideaway.
  • Examine your own feelings about how much energy you owe to work and how much to yourself. When you've reached your own answer to that question, start to live as though you believed it
You can expect that it will be difficult to break the habit at first and it will feel uncomfortable to be disconnected and on your own, but it's important and you'll start to feel recharged so that you can be that much more effective when you get back to work.

 
 
 

Related Articles

 
Physiological Consequences of Carrying Emotional Trauma
 
Stressed Out? Journal it on your Blog
 
Letting Go of Judgment - Finding Good (God) In Others
 
The 5 Reasons You Have Failed To Flourish - A Series (Part 3)
 
Can The Existence Of Life After Death Be Proven?
 
Happiness ? Anything Over $12,000 Can't Buy It
 
Drug Addiction and Alcoholism: A Disease
 
Drug Addiction Treatment Centers: A Fresh Start
 
Power Affirmation: "I am Creating the Causes of Wealth Everyday"
 
Help Yourself Find Help
 
 
 
Add URL
 
 

Teens & Children

 

Food & Recipe

 

Automobiles

 

Adventure & Sports

 

Society & Communities

 

Hotels & Travel

 

Science & Research

 

Computers & Networking

 

Self Help

 

Government & Politics

 

Employment & Careers

 

Music & Entertainment

 

Shopping Online

 

Culture & Art

 

Medicine & Treatment

 

Events & News

 

Lifestyle & Fashion

 

Business & Commerce

 

Family & Home

 

Estate & Realty

 

Banking & Finance

 

Education & Learning

 

Online & Indoor Games

 

Fitness & Health


 
Main :> Privacy :> Terms of Use  
Copyright © 2008 www.articlexpo.com