The idea of achieving work/life balance is a modern-day knockoff of
the American Dream, rooted in the minds of ambitious yet overworked
professionals who want to “have it all” -- work and play, career and
family.
I don’t believe there is such a thing as “work/life
balance.” You don’t hear people talking about finding a “family/life
balance” or an “eating/life balance.” IT'S ALL LIFE.
Work usually
takes priority over the rest, however, because work is what we spend the
majority of our day doing, it financially supports our dreams, and it’s
a core part of our identities (the first “small talk” question people
usually ask is what you do for a living). Add mobile technology to our
career-driven lives, and work priorities now have the potential to take
over our personal lives. When this happens, professionals are putting
their relationships, mental and physical health, and overall happiness
at risk.
HOW TECHNOLOGY SKEWS OUR PRIORITIES
The
reason work seems to be encroaching more and more on our personal time
is that every day, we unknowingly hand over precious power to alerts and
notifications -- distractions ironically set up to ensure we don’t miss
a thing.
My notifications come from Google, business blogs,
email, productivity apps, airfare alerts, my investment firm, and (what
should be at the top of my list) my son’s school. When we’re constantly
bombarded with these bits of information, priorities and distractions
start to run together, and we have a hard time knowing what to focus on.
And that struggle is about to get worse. I'm a marketer and our whole
mission in life is to get you to pay attention, to make what we have to
say more important than anything else you could be doing at the moment.
According to analyst firm Gartner, by 2017 Marketers will spend more on
IT than CIOs.
Most of that investment is to help us get you to stop,
listen, read, watch, click, like, share, tweet, pin and buy.
IT’S NOT ALL TECHNOLOGY’S FAULT
How
do you know when your priorities have truly gone awry? I believe it’s
when you’ve reached a point where the urgency to react to something is
disproportionate to its priority. Although technology enables every
notification or alert to seem urgent, technology itself isn’t the true
culprit. Rather, it’s our relationship with technology that throws us
off-balance.
Do you delay a scheduled workout because you feel
compelled to reply to an email first? Do your kids ask you to step away
from Facebook? Do unread emails cause you stress even after a 12-hour
workday? Do you check your phone at dinner? These are all signs that you
have an imbalanced relationship with technology.
4 WAYS TO BALANCE YOUR LIFE
Below
are a few simple ways to begin building a more balanced life -- one
where you have room for hobbies, health, relationships, and personal
priorities.
1. TAKE 30 MINUTES EACH MORNING BEFORE CHECKING YOUR EMAIL OR PHONE
I
used to wake up every morning and immediately look at my phone to see
if there was anything urgent in my inbox or something interesting on
Facebook. It always started with me telling myself, “I’m just going to
check,” but that quick check turned into 30 minutes of working, mentally
prioritizing my to-do list, and looking for a problem to react to.
The
most defining moment of your day is when you first wake up. You have a
choice about the first information you expose to your brain. By
meditating, exercising, journaling, or doing something reflective for
those first 30 minutes instead of opening the digital floodgates, you
allow yourself to start your day recharged and aware of your priorities.
Learning to control which information we pay attention to -- and when
-- is crucial to achieving balance.
2. IDENTIFY YOUR PERSONAL “CRITICAL PATH” PRIORITIES
Every
year, my company holds a meeting for our executive team to discuss our
“critical path” for the coming year. What are our most important
priorities? Our departments then align their goals along that path.
Professionals can benefit from going through this same process with
their personal lives.
Can you identify your five most important
personal goals and values? Do you want to be more connected to your
kids, be physically fit, or be on the road to a funded retirement? These
priorities are part of your personal “critical path”; if you don’t
define them now and give them the necessary attention, something less
important (but louder) is bound to take their place.
3. FIND A NON-WORK-RELATED PASSION
Without
any interests or hobbies outside work, we run the risk of becoming
resentful and isolated. While it sounds dedicated and noble to focus on
work 24/7, everyone knows this isn’t a realistic or sustainable
lifestyle. Research shows that this lifestyle can stifle creativity,
impair judgment, and diminish focus. Many companies show outward signs
of rewarding this behavior, but most people secretly have little respect
for individuals with no boundaries.
Learn a language, join a gym, or
volunteer at your child’s school. Most importantly, do something that
makes you step away from your computer and smartphone. Non-work-related,
tech-free passions expand your universe and make you a more interesting
person.
4. BUILD A COMMUNITY OF SUPPORT
Finding
a non-work-related passion also involves building supportive, nurturing
relationships outside of work. Money and jobs will come and go, but
trusted friends who have your personal interests at heart can help you
handle difficult professional decisions with less stress and more
confidence.
When we take a look at why it’s so hard to achieve
balance between work and our personal lives, technology designed to
serve us lies very close to the root of the problem. However, the root
itself has to do with our tendency to permit outside forces to drive our
priorities.
Being dedicated and ambitious is admirable, but
allowing work to define your self-worth and identity is dangerous. Don’t
let yourself wake up one day and realize your kids are out of the
house, you never went on that cruise, or you never ran a marathon.
By
reevaluating priorities and taking the necessary steps to unplug from
work and technology, you can achieve real balance -- improving your
health, happiness, and life as a whole.
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