Personal Time
Management for Mothers
I’m sure you’ve
been there before. You have a large family. Each
person has something different to do after school, and you have
to play driver, manager and provider all at once. Your kids
have their friends who need to be picked up for soccer practice
as well. Aside from that, you have the housecleaning to
do, chores to be taken care of and scheduled appointments to
keep. Your life is hectic, there’s no two ways about it.
Luckily, there is a solution. You can use personal time
management as a way to effectively take care of your
day.
You don’t have
much time to yourself if you are like the thousands of people
just mentioned. You wonder how you are going to be able
to accomplish this. Well, we know that can’t change the
amount of time that is in a day.
The good news
is that you can, using smart personal time management
techniques, manage your day a lot better and end up being much
relaxed while getting the same amount of work done during the
day. First, you have to step back and take a look at your
life. What do you feel is happening to the 24 hours you
get everyday? Look at specific items on your daily list that
take up a lot of time and try to figure out how to cut down on
that time.
Maybe you can
cut down on driving time by organizing pickups and drop-offs
better. That’s just one example of good personal time
management. There are many little strategies that can be done
to help get your time in better perspective. You may have too
many appointments. How about seeing if you can get them close
together or scheduling one day a week just for appointments and
nothing else. If you have children old enough, maybe
giving them some workload would lesson yours. This too
falls under personal time management.
Draw a Line
in the Sand
Making changes
in your life means taking a stand against any obstacles. In the
case of personal time management, this means that you have to
stop doing all those things that are unimportant and keep you
from working towards your goals. A quick check to dropping
tasks from your schedule is to ask yourself two questions –
“will the world stop working if you did not do it right now?”
and “does this help me further my goals?” If the answer is no
to both questions, you can safely drop that task from your
list.
If you are
ahead of schedule, take that extra time to do a job you would
have to do on another day. This will make that day more
open and will also be a good choice for personal time
management. A time management plan is what will save you
the anguish of not being able to get the curlers out of your
hair. Try personal time management to see how it can work
for
you.
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