The Greatest Time Management Strategy

Published: 06th August 2010
Views: N/A
Ask About This Article Print Republish This Article
Strategies that increase your efficiency, make you more effective, and free up time for the things that really count include goal-setting, planning and scheduling, and the self-discipline to control technology, say no and maintain focus. These are the basics that I have been teaching in my time management workshops.

But the greatest time management strategy of all is to live longer and healthier. Gaining an extra five years or more through healthy living far exceeds the few hours you may gain each week through time-saving tactics. Combine a longer healthier life with the time management basics and you have accomplished the ultimate.

The key word in all this is healthy. When I think of growing old, I have visions of visiting my father in a nursing home surrounded by elderly people slumped in wheel chairs staring blankly into space. As one elderly visitor remarked, "We are not living longer; we are dying longer.

Life expectancy is increasing; but life expectancy and health expectancy are two different things. You want to live longer, not die longer. This can be accomplished through balance. Most of us realize that our priorities include interactions with friends and family, adequate sleep, renewal time, proper diet, exercise and mental fitness. But these priorities are under attack by the eat-and-run mentality of the electronic age.


Speed seems to be the new currency. We are driving faster, eating faster, working faster and sleeping less. No longer do we work 9 to 5. In fact, with BlackBerrys and other PDAs, work is no longer a place you go to, but a state of mind. The U.S. is the most vacation-starved country in the Western world, according to Joan Chittister, in her book, The Gift of Years. And when people do take a vacation, most of them keep in daily contact with their work. Multitasking is the norm, and work time is eroding family time and sleep time.

We must realize that fast is not better; it's just faster. And life is not about going faster; it's about going farther. It's what you accomplish that's important, not the speed at which you travel.

Among the goals that we set and the activities and tasks that we schedule in our planners, should be those things that have been surviving on scraps of time left over from our work-related pursuits. These will include such things as vacations, family outings, and leisure activities with friends, hobbies, lunch breaks, medical checkups, and physical exercise.


To live a longer and healthier life, and maximize our accomplishments, we must bring balance into our lives and forgo all the fast-food and frenzy.


------

Harold Taylor's website https://www.taylorintime.com
Harold Taylor has been speaking, writing and conducting training programs on the topic of effective time management for over 30 years. He has written 16 books, including the Canadian bestseller, Making Time Work For You. He has developed over 50 time management products that have sold in 38 countries around the world.

This article is free for republishing
Source: http://haroldtaylor.articlealley.com/the-greatest-time-management-strategy-1683080.html


Report this article Ask About This Article Print Republish This Article


Loading...
More to Explore
 


Ask a Professional Online Now
27 Experts are Online. Ask a Question, Get an Answer ASAP.
Type your question here...
Optional:
Select...