Did anyone notice that I haven’t posted for weeks? No? That’s okay.
My website (and this blog) has been down for at least a week and a half before I had the time and mental space to book someone to attend to it.
Two interesting facts:
- I don’t believe in the phrase “I don’t have time” – exhibit A, my book, 31 days of Enough Time.
- It is tremendous growth for me to not “freak out” about a website being down.
With regards to number 2 above, this has happened a couple of times over the last few years. In the before times, I’d immediately book a person to attend to it and would not rest until it was sorted.
This time, I looked at the error, thought I should be able to fix it (I do like the methodical part of playing with a website, and tinkering until things are just right.) but knew I didn’t have either the mental bandwidth or early evening time (trust me when I say you should not mess around with your website if your brain isn’t fully awake – this involves emails to web people that say “help – I messed up!”).
So I just left it until I had time to look at it.
I was able to fix one tiny thing but not the bigger issue so I hired that piece out.
And lo, here I am blogging again.
Time management literature says that fixing the website is a Quadrant 1 activity – important and urgent.
However, my Quadrant 2 activity was tending to my health (sleep, stress management by putting in extra work hours so I could sleep – yes, a circular argument, and exercise) first and then once calm, I could attend to that Quadrant 1 activity.
I shared all that to say this: sometimes the best thing to do is to invest the time necessary to make you feel calm, no matter what that looks like.
Sometimes work colleagues will be adamant in talking to me about shutting off their computers at exactly 5pm. I’m not saying this is wrong but I am questioning whether 30 extra minutes of work might give you a better evening’s rest and certainly, more rejuvenating sleep.
Just a little something to think about.
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