JLPH / Getty Image
Manage your responsibilities — and your free time
Vanderkam said there are 36 waking hours between 6 p.m. Friday and 6 a.m. Monday. So there’s a lot of time to balance responsibilities and time for yourself.
She recommends thinking of the weekend in five chunks: Friday night, Saturday day, Saturday night, Sunday day, Sunday night. This can help you time and plan weekend activities and responsibilities.
Time-management coach Alexis Haselberger told me that a lot of her clients struggle with relaxation and putting work down.
This can be worsened when you schedule an unrealistic responsibility load into your weekend. The outstanding tasks in the back of your mind can make you feel like you didn’t have a weekend — and make you feel bad for not completing it.
She recommended making a manageable to-do list and blocking time off to complete the tasks. People can experiment with balancing responsibilities and free time, she said, since creating a fulfilling weekend is so individualized and requires work.
Plus, Vanderkam said if you do finish all your tasks — don’t go looking for new ones to do.
Try something new
You’re not really creating new memories while binging Netflix, scrolling TikTok, or chilling around your home. So this can make it feel like you did nothing over the weekend, Haselberger said.
She told me that people often think doing these activities will help you decompress from the week — ”and it does in the moment, but then it doesn't. And then we're scrambling to do all of the things.”
Haselberger recommends that people ask themselves: What can you do on the weekend that is outside of something that you would normally do to make the weekend feel like it was a prolonged period of time?
No comments:
Post a Comment