9 Ways to Make Up for This Week's Lost Hour
Magazine / 9 Ways to Make Up for This Week’s Lost Hour

9 Ways to Make Up for This Week’s Lost Hour

Career Parenting
9 Ways to Make Up for This Week’s Lost Hour

Yes, we are springing forward this Sunday. That means that this week is a wee bit shorter than most. But there’s no reason it has to feel like it. Here are a few ways to get that hour back:

1. Watch an hour less of TV.

everyday-912097_1920

Commit this week to watching only shows you love and absolutely nothing else.

2. Do one thing at a time.

home-office-599475_1920

When you try to check email while writing an essay, it can take 15 minutes or more to get back into the swing of things. Multi-tasking eats hours. Focus until you finish and then move on.

3. Eat sandwiches for dinner.

sandwich-1031517_1280

Or leftovers, or a frozen pizza, or eggs, or a quick salad. The point of family dinners is to be together, not channel Julia Child.

4. Run one less errand.

at-night-1201249_1920

You’ll survive without that extra light bulb for a few more days.

5. Lower your housekeeping standards.

nostalgia-635619_1920

The house will just get dirty again, but you’ll never get that hour back. The laundry can wait another day or two.

6. Aim for good enough.

ironing-403074_1920

The vast majority of our work doesn’t have to be done to perfection, it just has to be done.

7. Give things a home.

shelf-196575_1920

Time spent hunting for shoes and cell phones isn’t helping anyone.

8. Realize you look great already.

Screen Shot 2016-03-06 at 10.52.38 PM

The difference between a 45-minute personal care routine and a 30-minute one is more than an hour per workweek.
If it’s possible, negotiate to work from home one day per week. Ditching the commute (and the suit) easily buys back an hour.

9. Practice saying “no.”

child-774063_1920

When you don’t volunteer for something, that doesn’t mean that thing isn’t important. Indeed, it could be so important that you know you can’t give it the attention it deserves. Suggest someone who could.

 


A version of this post appeared on Laura Vanderkam’s website where she writes about strategically managing time between her work and family.

Download
the Next Big Idea App

app-store play-market
-->