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getting out of balance
Getting Out of Balance
by Donald E. Wetmore
The underlying core of my more than 2,000 Time Management
presentations during the last twenty years has been the concept of "balance."
Success in managing our time has less to do with the tools available to us, such as
"to do lists" and techniques for delegation, as it has to do with achieving
daily balance in our lives. If we are not in balance to begin with, we are likely to
sabotage our success. Successful Time Management, then, has a lot to do with what we are
not doing.
Here's my list of the seven best ways to "Get Out of Balance."
1. Ignore your Health.
Don't get the quantity and quality of sleep you require. Don't take time for
exercise. Eat the wrong stuff. (90% of those who join Health and Fitness Clubs
today will stop going within the next 90 days.) Your resistance level will be reduced and
you will be susceptible to all the latest sniffles and flues going around to ensure that
you take advantage of all the sick days you are allowed. Seventy five percent of all adult
deaths are preventable. We are literally driving ourselves to early graves in
these "hurry-up, stressful" lives of ours.
The Key to
Life is Balance
 
The Key to Life is Balance
- order this poster from Art.com
It's interesting that when someone gets a new car, they bring it in for the scheduled
maintenance, put the right grade of fuel in the tank, and keep it shiny and
clean. Our pets visit the veterinarian on a scheduled basis. In a recent study,
34% of the men surveyed said they would not go to the doctor even if they were
experiencing chest pains.
2. Postpone Family time.
They will always be there for you anyway when you get the time for them. A student
once asked me, "what is the best way to take my four year old on
vacation?" I replied, "You take her when she's four years old." Fifty
percent of marriages wind up in divorce court. Imagine, getting married at age twenty-five
and twenty years later, at age forty-five, you give up 50% of everything you
have worked for in your adult life in a property settlement in divorce court. It's like
the squirrel, gathering the nuts, hoarding away while someone is drilling a hole in the
side of the tree to let all the nuts escape. The squirrel is too busy to hear the
impending threat. The average working person spends less than two minutes per day in
meaningful communication with their spouse or "significant other" and less than
thirty seconds per day in meaningful communication with their children.
3. Don't plan your financial life.
Be assured that your employer, and if not, then the government, and if not, then
maybe a kindly relative will take care of your needs. Most people arrive at the end of life financially deficient or dependent upon some type of assistance
from the government or relatives. Most people do not spend a little of their time, on a
regular basis, to create financial freedom and live their lives they way they "want
to", but rather do what do because they "have to". Eighty percent do not
want to go to work on Monday morning. Ninety-seven percent say that if they did achieve
financial freedom, they would not continue
with their current employer or in their current line of work.
4. Stay away from intellectual development.
You have the degree. You read books at one time. Five percent of the population
purchases ninety-five percent of all the books. The other ninety-five purchase the
other five percent of the books. They don't have time to read them. They give
them away as gifts. You barely have enough time to keep your head above water, what with work and other interests. Coast with the
knowledge you have. It's draining away from you daily, but hopefully you filled the
reservoir enough early on that it will carry you through your life.
5. Let your social contacts decide your future.
Follow the advice of your friends about what you should be doing in your life even if
they are not in a place where you would want to be. Be ever conscious of "What
would my friends say/think if I did . . . ?" Always seek out and act only
with the approval of your peers. Take comfort in the knowledge that when there is a
void in leadership in your life on how you should be spending your time, someone else
will fill that void and tell you what to do.
6. Let your professional life just happen.
Do not establish a lifetime plan of where you want to go. Take whatever opportunity
and advancement life gives you and be satisfied. Don't rock the boat. Seek the
familiar and avoid the strange. Play it safe. Make it comfortable. If you chose
a career path when you were eighteen or twenty years old, and now at age forty you
are unhappy, don't consider a change. Hold on to that decision you made twenty
years ago. It will be like going to a twenty year old for career counseling.
7. Avoid spending time in your spiritual area.
Not only in a formal religious venue, but also in our relationships to others, our
community, our environment, and the universe. Leave those questions to others to
ponder. "When man forgets his Creator, his own creations will turn
upon him."
Dr. Donald E. Wetmore, a full-time Professional Speaker, is one of the foremost
experts on Time Management and Personal Productivity and the author of "Beat the
Clock".
Would you like to receive free Timely Time Management Tips on a regular basis to increase
your personal productivity and get more out of every day? Sign up now for the free
"Time Management Discussion List". Just go to:
http://www.topica.com/lists/timemanagement
and select "subscribe".
Article courtesy of MediaPeak, http://mediapeak.com
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