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View Full Version : How Do You Seperate Work Life From Home Life?


CNBFlowers
12-15-2006, 12:48 PM
For those of you that work from home, how do you seperate your home life from your work life?

I know that at times when I am working from home, there are things lingering in the back of my mind that need to be done around the house. So, I try to make myself a daily schedule to get the most from my day.

For example, when I first get up, and am drinking my coffee, I usually check my email and decide how my time will be spent best working that day. I decide what I need to do that day as far as work goes, and then I am off to exercise, and shower. After that I am ready to work for a couple of hours, and then I usually break for lunch and do some things that are needed to be done around the house.
Then back to work.... this goes on through out my day.

What do most of your days look like?

sammy
12-29-2006, 01:28 PM
my day is very much the same as yours

Audrey
01-01-2007, 06:22 PM
Today, I work part time at home and part time out of the house.

When I worked full time at home, I had really clear boundries and a really clear work schedule.

I would indeed put laundry in during the day, but I worked. I was able to put in 8 hours per day, plus go to the market, be a room parent, cook, clean etc.

This is an article I wrote about scheduling:

Making Time For Both Your Home Business and Your Family

I remember when I began my first business. There were just not enough hours in the day. And this was true for each of the 7 days of the week. My daughter was only 3 months old when I started that business. I was not working outside of the home.

I was now looking at needing time to be a mom to my newborn daughter, be a daughter to my two wonderful parents, be a wife to my husband, take care of the household and now run a business.

Unfortunately, as is often the case, my business was the only entity not suffering from time neglect. I was working 80 to 100 hours per week on this business. I seldom spoke to friends. I was constantly saying no to social invitations. My husband and I were fast becoming strangers. I was also missing out on quality time with my daughter as her dad took over bath time, bed time and even weekend time.

Then I discovered day planners. I was now scheduling everything. By using a day planner I discovered I actually had time to say yes to some of those social invitations. I had time to visit with my parents at least once a week. I had time to spend with my husband and I took back some nights with my daughter, bathing her and putting her to bed at night.

This day planner worked wonderfully all through my next pregnancy and the years that followed. I was able to volunteer at school, go on field trips and still run a successful business.

I remember when my daughter was a teenager, she knew the rules. “If you want me there, you need to put it into my day planner”. I recall she and I battled one day as she felt it was silly for a teenager to have to schedule time with mom. She was right that it does sound silly, however if she wanted me at her school, if she needed me to drive carpool, if she wanted me to attend a meeting, or even if she wanted to schedule in a lunch, if she wrote it in my day planner, it was going to happen. She began really hearing her friend’s complaints of moms who worked too much, had too many meetings and had no time for their daughters. These moms did not use day planners like I did. These women were not being able to find time to give to their daughters. I was often driving their children to events as they couldn’t find the time.

I scheduled my business time too. I knew which days/hours were going to be spent marketing, talking with customers, talking with team members etc. When you keep track of your time in writing, in a day planner, it is so much easier to fit it all in. I scheduled several times per day to check email and return phone calls. It truly is easier to answer 5 calls back to back versus stopping what you’re doing to answer the phone 5 different times.

One area that was troubling to me was reading. I had a huge list of books that had been recommended to me and yet I was not finding the time to read them. One mentor said “can you find 10 minutes per day?” I laughed. “I’m the queen of day planners, or course I can find 10 minutes a day, why?” He went on to explain that 10 minutes per day reading came out to over an hour per week, over 4 hours per month. He felt quite confident that spending just 10 minutes per day would have me finishing about one book per month. This was so easy to schedule in. I left home 10 minutes early to pick my daughter up from school. I spent those 10 extra minutes either in the car reading, or I’d sit on the grass when the weather was nice and use those 10 minutes to read. I began getting through that list of books and loved what I was learning.

My kids are both older now. While they were young, having a day planner helped me have it all, a successful business and plenty of time with my family.

****
Audrey Okaneko has worked from home since 1983. She can be reached at audreyoka@cox.net or visited at http://www.scrapping-made-simple.com

CNBFlowers
01-01-2007, 08:33 PM
Today, I work part time at home and part time out of the house.

When I worked full time at home, I had really clear boundries and a really clear work schedule.

I would indeed put laundry in during the day, but I worked. I was able to put in 8 hours per day, plus go to the market, be a room parent, cook, clean etc.

This is an article I wrote about scheduling:

Making Time For Both Your Home Business and Your Family

I remember when I began my first business. There were just not enough hours in the day. And this was true for each of the 7 days of the week. My daughter was only 3 months old when I started that business. I was not working outside of the home.

I was now looking at needing time to be a mom to my newborn daughter, be a daughter to my two wonderful parents, be a wife to my husband, take care of the household and now run a business.

Unfortunately, as is often the case, my business was the only entity not suffering from time neglect. I was working 80 to 100 hours per week on this business. I seldom spoke to friends. I was constantly saying no to social invitations. My husband and I were fast becoming strangers. I was also missing out on quality time with my daughter as her dad took over bath time, bed time and even weekend time.

Then I discovered day planners. I was now scheduling everything. By using a day planner I discovered I actually had time to say yes to some of those social invitations. I had time to visit with my parents at least once a week. I had time to spend with my husband and I took back some nights with my daughter, bathing her and putting her to bed at night.

This day planner worked wonderfully all through my next pregnancy and the years that followed. I was able to volunteer at school, go on field trips and still run a successful business.

I remember when my daughter was a teenager, she knew the rules. “If you want me there, you need to put it into my day planner”. I recall she and I battled one day as she felt it was silly for a teenager to have to schedule time with mom. She was right that it does sound silly, however if she wanted me at her school, if she needed me to drive carpool, if she wanted me to attend a meeting, or even if she wanted to schedule in a lunch, if she wrote it in my day planner, it was going to happen. She began really hearing her friend’s complaints of moms who worked too much, had too many meetings and had no time for their daughters. These moms did not use day planners like I did. These women were not being able to find time to give to their daughters. I was often driving their children to events as they couldn’t find the time.

I scheduled my business time too. I knew which days/hours were going to be spent marketing, talking with customers, talking with team members etc. When you keep track of your time in writing, in a day planner, it is so much easier to fit it all in. I scheduled several times per day to check email and return phone calls. It truly is easier to answer 5 calls back to back versus stopping what you’re doing to answer the phone 5 different times.

One area that was troubling to me was reading. I had a huge list of books that had been recommended to me and yet I was not finding the time to read them. One mentor said “can you find 10 minutes per day?” I laughed. “I’m the queen of day planners, or course I can find 10 minutes a day, why?” He went on to explain that 10 minutes per day reading came out to over an hour per week, over 4 hours per month. He felt quite confident that spending just 10 minutes per day would have me finishing about one book per month. This was so easy to schedule in. I left home 10 minutes early to pick my daughter up from school. I spent those 10 extra minutes either in the car reading, or I’d sit on the grass when the weather was nice and use those 10 minutes to read. I began getting through that list of books and loved what I was learning.

My kids are both older now. While they were young, having a day planner helped me have it all, a successful business and plenty of time with my family.

****
Audrey Okaneko has worked from home since 1983. She can be reached at audreyoka@cox.net or visited at http://www.scrapping-made-simple.com

Thanks for the great advice! I appreciate it!

Audrey
01-02-2007, 04:06 PM
Glad you found the article helpful. I began in direct sales in 1983 when my daughter was only a few months old.

Today, that daughter is 23, so how my day was scheduled, has changed dramatically over the years.

Ravish30
01-11-2007, 02:50 PM
I work by schedule....if I worked outside my home I would have to work set hours...so to make sure I get my work done from home...I do the same thing! I have made my family and friends as well as my downline know what hours and days I am working.

Shelly

bkamanski
01-26-2007, 10:22 AM
I am one of those people who wakes up at 4:30 or 5:00 in the morning with a smile and a great attitude! I work from 5-9 roughly and I am done for the day...

Brad :D ;)

melindaf
02-08-2007, 01:56 AM
I like the question. Tough to do. Seems I am consgtantly thinking business. My business partners are my immediate family so I am always around the business. I love my family and our business so even though it is hard to seperate, we make the best of it

philgtc
08-15-2007, 05:50 AM
I agree Audrey

You need to plan your Business Day. Great Post

I find it very easy to get sidetracked especially when it comes to developing a website. Theres so many things you can add or improve.

The you get to looking for advice in forums and find a new idea that gets you sidetracked.

So I simply list the 5 most important things I need to do for the day (including housework) and ensure I complete them before I get sidetracked.

work2bfree
08-15-2007, 11:33 PM
Hi,
To answer your question, I find the separation for me to be quite easy. I am a software engineer so my work life can and is very stressful. It is pretty much going from one deadline to the next. But, for the past 4 years I have been able to separate the two by first setting some goals for me and my family. Then what I have done is to put a plan together on how I am going to accomplish those goals, and then lastly get to working on them each and every day. If I don't have to stay late, I will leave work, come home and do whatever chores I have to do around the house, then I go somewhere and start working on my goals. When I work on my goals, I forget about work and don't think about the job until I have to go back the next day. It takes some discipline, but focusing on my goals is been a big blessing for me. :)