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Seven Ways to Create More Time In Your Day

Do you ever feel like you have way too much time on your hands, and far too little work and life to fit into it? Unless you’re a teen on summer break, I reckon it’s unlikely! Most of us would love to have an extra couple of hours in each day. With two more hours, we could find time to exercise, to read some of the books that are gathering dust on our shelves, to spend time with the kids…

But, unless you’re lucky enough to find a magic genie who can stretch your days to twenty-six hours long, you’re stuck with the same twenty-four hours per day as the rest of the world. So how can you create more time in your day? Here are seven magic ways:

  1. Get Up Earlier
    Okay, this one’s not exactly genius (or even genie) level. Get up fifteen minutes earlier. If you’re like most folk, your morning probably feels rushed: you drag yourself out of bed at the last possible minute, grab a hasty shower, maybe get some breakfast if you’re lucky, sort out the kids/cat/partner and dash off to work.

Getting up just a bit earlier can give you some breathing space. Perhaps it’ll give you time to actually sit down and enjoy your breakfast for once. Maybe you can use that fifteen minutes a day to read through that book or stack of journals that you keep meaning to get to.

Surprisingly few people take the time to plan their workday, and end up spinning their wheels on a number of low-priority tasks without really accomplishing anything big.

If you need to answer a number of emails, do them all at once. The same goes for phone calls, filing, photocopying and other similar tasks.

The best way to tackle big projects like this is to force them into your schedule. Spare time doesn’t just appear from nowhere – you need to make a conscious effort to create it. Block out a weekend afternoon, for instance: tell family and friends you have another engagement that day. Then storm on ahead with that project. Trust me, you’ll feel great for having made a start.

If you want some more advice on this one, read The Death of Multitasking and Rebirth of Unitasking, or Mono-Task And Work More Effectively.

You’ll accomplish much more by working in a deliberately focused way than if you let yourself jump around from task to task as things come to mind.

If you work for yourself, you need to be even more self-disciplined, as your work is likely to be very easily accessible when you’re at home! Some good ways to create a boundary at the end of the day are to keep your work separate from the rooms in your house where you relax. You could also schedule something social in the evening (perhaps meeting friends for a drink) so that you can’t get caught up in “just one more email”…

What could you do with an extra ten hours every week? How could you create more time in your day?

Written on 11/18/2009 by Ali Hale. Ali is a professional writer and blogger, and a part-time postgraduate student of creative writing. If you need a hand with any sort of written project, drop her a line (ali@aliventures.com) or check out her website at Aliventures. Photo Credit: gadl
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