Tag Archives: time management

How To Hold Yourself Accountable For Your Time

Recently there was a week where I had fallen behind on my writing goal. There just simply wasn’t enough time! Life got busy, it happens. I had a lot of stuff going on. Less than an hour after coming to this conclusion, I was on the subway headed home, and I was playing Angry Birds Space – a highly addictive sequel to a highly addictive little iPhone game. An achievement popped up on my screen informing me that I had been playing the game for five hours – and the game had come out less than a week ago. Continue reading

The Importance of Indulging

Most of our waking lives are consumed by what has to be done in order to survive. We shower to be clean, eat either to live or just to consume, buy in order to feel better or feel powerful, watch TV for distraction or boredom. Continue reading

How To Measure and Greatly Improve Your Productivity

We’re not productive because we are not AWARE of our moments of being unproductive. Our minds get distracted by a cool video on YouTube, or an interesting article we read on Yahoo News, or a phone call or one of a myriad of other things. Continue reading

Time Management Basics: Get On Top of Life Today

Do you wish you had an extra hour in the day?

Perhaps you struggle to get everything done – or you find that you only manage to get projects completed in a huge rush before a deadline. Continue reading

The Secret to Doing Your Best Work Effortlessly

Have you ever found yourself daydreaming or just not into your work? Do you feel like it’s a struggle sometimes to concentrate or to get anything done? And at other times, are you able to do your work effortlessly, getting everything done quickly and efficiently? What’s going on here? It might not be you. It might not be your work. It might be your location. Continue reading

3 Ways to Become Better at Time Management

Why do we have to work so hard to learn Time Management, to master it?
Shouldn’t we be born with the ability to work efficiently?

The problem is that we have the tendency to want to take the easy way, the short way, and as many have said before me, “A shortcut can often lead to long delays”. Continue reading