10/18/2013

Time Management and Priorities : Finding Time for Self-Care


 We are all only given 24 hours in a day, everyday. That is an equal for all of us, no matter what the situation is, no matter how successful or unsuccessful, rich or not as fortunate.
  It can be challenging to find time to take care of yourself, especially when you have enough things to do already! Your 24 hours quickly disappears! Many people are great care takers of children or of their elder parents, there is not enough time in the day to serve everyone that needs to be served or earn enough money that needs to be earned. So the main skills that are correlated with self-care are priority-setting and also time-management.
This box demonstrates a simple way blending these two elements: time management and priority-setting. The four boxes center around two thoughts: Urgency and Importance.
            1. Urgent, Important
            2. Important, Not Urgent
            3. Urgent, Not Important
            4. Not Urgent, Not Important

With these two ideas in mind, I can replay every action, that I did in my mind and categorize which box that action goes in.

For example, activities that go in the first box are: Putting out stressful "fires,"crises or deadlines. Work deadlines, family emergencies, project/homework is due, major complaint from large company,  
             The second box is my "Creative pro-activity." Here is quality time/production, Preparation, prevention, planning, career development, long-term strategy, relationship building, personal fulfillment, quality family time and taking care of myself by going to gym or reading a self-development book. The third box may be my least favorite box. These activities are red herrings (plausible but not important or relevant) , Interruptions like phone calls, some office meetings, some mail, chose of colors on a wall, etc.  The fourth box is time wasting: TV, Internet, Video games, fun, relaxing, does not add much of any other value, distractions, trivial activities and "escapes" from reality. We need to spend some therapeutic laughter and pleasure time in life, but we need to limit this category or we will become its slave. 

 Here are a few more of these charts to help bring home the point: