Tuesday, May 19, 2020
How Weekend Productivity Can Lead to Success
How Weekend Productivity Can Lead to Success My day yesterday was the epitome of a âlazy Sunday.â While I did laundry, made dinner and washed some dishes, I honestly just sat around in sweats and switched back and forth between football games and House Hunters on TV. I thoroughly enjoyed every single second of my RR, but I canât help but feel a tad bit guilty. In college it was so easy. Weekends were spent drinking too much at night and then recovering the entire next day. Rarely did I get anything accomplished besides eating horrendously greasy food and catching up on Real Housewives.Now that Iâm working so much during the week, Iâm exhausted by the time Friday rolls around and want nothing but to lie in bed sans hangover and get a grip on my exhaustion. #PostGradProblems Recently I came across this Forbes article titled, â14 Things Successful People Do on Weekends.â I decided to do a little compare and contrast on the article and realized if the tasks listed are a true measure of success, I have got a lot of work to do: Make time for family and friends. Check! I have some pretty great friends and an awesome family, so this is always an easy one for me. Exercise. Fail. But donât worry â" Iâm starting back to the gym tomorrow. (I swear I havenât been saying that every day for the past six weeksâ¦) Pursue a passion. Ummmâ¦.*Crickets* Vacation. Fail. Getting pulled into work on a Monday that should make for a long weekend crushed my camping/hiking dreams this time. Disconnect. Check! I canât even log on to my Gmail account without someone at work G-Chatting me. Yesterday I practiced the art of âGo Invisibleâ. Volunteer. Fail⦠I got nothinâ. Avoid chores. Fail. Working 55+ hours during the week leaves me no choice but to clean and do laundry on the weekend. Plan. Fail. The beau and I have been âtalkingâ about a pre-Christmas ski trip for the past six months. Weâll see if it actually happens. Heck, I can barely plan my meals for each week. Socialize. Check! I kicked butt at Scattegories Friday night with some great peepskiis. Gardening/crafts/games/sports/cooking/cultural activities. Check! I threw a bunch of ingredients into a crock pot. Totally counts for cooking. Network. Fail. As a girl in PR, youâd think Iâd thrive in any atmosphere where I can network. Truthfully, I hate it and if I have to network during the week, I avoid it on the weekends. (Clearly something I need to fix.) Reflect. Check/fail. Iâm not sure. In typical Millennial fashion, I did spend some time thinking about all the wonderful people and things in my life, but at the same time started stressing about all the things I want to have/do that my bank account wonât allow. Meditate. Does praying to the football gods for a Redskins victory over the Cowboys count? If so, then Check! Recharge. Check times five! Certainly caught some Zzzs this weekend. For past several months, my argument has been, I work enough on my career success during the week. No need for that on the weekends. But after failing a majority of the 14 tasks that make people successful this weekend, I realize itâs probably time for some change. Normally, when I read these types of articles, I start to freak out thinking Iâm living life all wrong and Iâll never become âsuccessfulâ. Iâm going to take this little evaluation as incentive to be more productive on the weekend and teach myself to save some energy for my life beyond work. This evaluation was a reminder that being successful isnât all about work, work and more work. Itâs about learning to balance work with all of the other things you love to do in your life. As driven career girls, the sooner we can learn how to love our careers and our lives at the same time, the better. Weâll be much happier with the lives weâve created â" whatâs more successful than that? Let me know what you do outside of work that gets you a little closer to your balanced, successful lifestyle!
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