How to create more time?

This is, of course, not an all-inclusive list, but it’s a good start to reclaiming some time back. These were some of my biggest time-wasters:

  1. Television – just stop it. Besides the occasional news, a movie every once in a while, some documentaries, I found it to be a huge time-waster.

  2. Internet/web – It’s really become the new television, and as such, an equivalent waste of time. Ask yourself this, “Do I really need to see another cat video?”

  3. Email – This was a more difficult one for me since responding to emails made me believe that I was being more productive. However, responding to emails all day was actually making me less productive by taking my focus off things that I really needed to get done. I now limit my time and frequency of responding to emails.

Seven Ways to Create More Time In Your Day

1·Get Up Earlier

Get up fifteen minutes earlier. If you’re like most folk, your morning probably feels rushed: you drag yourself out of bed at the last possible minute, grab a hasty shower, maybe get some breakfast if you’re lucky.提前15分钟起床。
Getting up just a bit earlier can give you some breathing space. Perhaps it’ll give you time to actually sit down and enjoy your breakfast for once. Maybe you can use that fifteen minutes a day to read through that book or stack of journals that you keep meaning to get to.

2·Create a Plan

At the start of your workday, before you even check your emails, make a plan. Jot down the three most important tasks you want to accomplish that day. Put a big star next to the most important. Now, before you get into the busy work of emails and photocopying and tidying your desk, start on that important task and see it through to the end.
Surprisingly few people take the time to plan their workday, and end up spinning their wheels on a number of low-priority tasks without really accomplishing anything big.

3·Batch Tasks Together

When you’re going through the workday, try to keep similar tasks together. When you switch from one thing to another, your brain takes a few minutes to catch up and settle in: constantly jumping between answering emails and writing a report and tidying up your desk just means you’ll lose track of where you’d got to. You might feel like you’re working super-efficiently (because your mind is buzzing all over the place), but you’ll actually be wasting a lot of time.

If you need to answer a number of emails, do them all at once. The same goes for phone calls, filing, photocopying and other similar tasks.

4·Block Out Chunks of Time

Do you have some big project that you’d love to get round to? Maybe it’s writing a novel, starting a business, training for a marathon… whatever your particular venture or goal, you never get around to making progress.

The best way to tackle big projects like this is to force them into your schedule. Spare time doesn’t just appear from nowhere – you need to make a conscious effort to create it. Block out a weekend afternoon, for instance: tell family and friends you have another engagement that day. Then storm on ahead with that project. Trust me, you’ll feel great for having made a start.

5· Don’t Multitask

Although multitasking feels efficient – because it feels busy – it actually loses you time. By sticking to doing one thing at a time, you’ll be much more focused and able to produce your best work: there’s nothing efficient about rushing a job which you then end up having to redo.

6· Stay Focused

When you are working on a task, make a conscious effort to remain focused. Sure, you’ll have intrusive thoughts like maybe I should check my email or this desk could really do with tidying. Just recognize that those thoughts are impulses which you don’t need to give into. If you think of something while you’re working on your task like I really must phone Joe, then just make a note on a bit of paper or in your diary so you don’t forget – and get on with the task at hand.

You’ll accomplish much more by working in a deliberately focused way than if you let yourself jump around from task to task as things come to mind.

7· Finish Work On Time
Finally, one of the best ways to make more time in your life is to finish your work on time! If you work for an employer, make an effort to leave the office on time – at least a couple of days each week. (I know this is difficult if your workplace has a long-hours culture).

If you work for yourself, you need to be even more self-disciplined, as your work is likely to be very easily accessible when you’re at home! Some good ways to create a boundary at the end of the day are to keep your work separate from the rooms in your house where you relax. You could also schedule something social in the evening (perhaps meeting friends for a drink) so that you can’t get caught up in “just one more email”.

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