Doing A Time Audit
In knowing how you are spending your time, you can find the places for improvement. As we reboot our lives, we need to have an accurate assessment of how you are spending your time. Enter the time audit.
Life Reboot: Thinning Projects
In the last article, I talked about how to figure out what your projects are. Chances are, that if you made a complete list, you will find it is much longer than you thought. If your project list doesn't seem do-able, you need to thin your project list.
Life Reboot: What Do I Want Less Of In My Life?
As part of the life reboot process, I have to figure out a target for where I am going. Today I will look at the flip side: deciding what needs to be eliminated from my life.
Life Reboot: What Do I Want More Of In My Life?
As part of the life reboot process, I have to figure out a target for where I am going. Sometimes it is as simple as asking what I want more of in my life. From there I can figure out how to bring these things into my life.
Life Reboot: What Do I Want My Weekends To Look Like?
Once I looked at my evenings, the next logical step for figuring out how I want to restructure my life is to look at my weekends. They are my largest chunk of free time, yet I have spent many weekends playing catch up, or doing things that don't move me toward where I want to be.
Life Reboot: Your Ideal Evening
As I look at re-balancing and rebooting my life, one of the first questions I asked myself was "what do I want my evenings to look like?" By figuring out where I want to go, I can plan a route to get there.
Personal Development Lessons From Slumdog Millionaire
I'll admit it openly: I rarely see a movie in the year it came out. I just don't make the time. Recently I watched Slumdog Millionaire for the first time, and I really enjoyed it. It stayed with me for days, and I've been turning over some of the lessons in the movie.
Taking time to enjoy the now
Life can turn into a flurry of scheduled events and task lists. It is easy to slip into a cycle of do-do-do and go-go-go. But no one dies with an empty inbox.