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Is time management a waste of time?

Are you struggling with time management for yourself and your team?  Feeling overwhelmed by the ‘To Do’ list?  You are not alone.  So perhaps it’s time for a different approach?

One of the most common complaints I hear from managers is how busy they are and how much work they’ve got to do.  Have we become afflicted by “death by to-do lists?”  While we enjoy the advantages of technology, there has never been a time when we were so overwhelmed with social media and the expectation of instant communication.  E-mails, text messages, LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook, Pinterest and the list goes on…

No doubt you’ve read a book about time management, attended a training session and used some sort of system to try to list, organize and prioritize all the things that you and the team have to do.  Yet, somehow you probably feel like you still can’t get everything done.  Perhaps time management is a waste of time?

So I wonder, should we be managing our time?  Or is it better to think about how we manage our attention?  Managing our attention allows us to work at our most productive.  In doing so, we can achieve what matters the most.  In turn, we can end each day knowing that we’ve done our best and made the most of the time that we have available.

5 Top Tips for ‘Attention Management’:

  1. Be Clear
    What are the most important tasks for the day?  Get everybody in the team to begin each day by getting clear on this.  Write it down, use it as a screen saver, whatever works best.  Make sure that you keep checking back to this across the day.
  2. Stay Focused 
    Now everyone knows what they need to do.  Help them keep focused on this list during the day.  Time block tasks, turn off the phone, don’t get distracted by the constant emails, etc (unless it’s their key job to do these things of course).
  3. Manage Alertness
    Teach the team how to monitor their alertness.   Do they need to increase or decrease their alertness?  Working in the zone of optimal attention enables everyone to work productively.
  4. Take Regular Breaks 
    Regular breaks help everyone to stay focused, a bit of movement thrown in there also helps to manage alertness.
  5. Manage your working environment  
    Where do you and your team do the best work?  In silence?  With music?  Office too hot or too cold?  Make sure you think about the environment and how this impacts on everyone’s work.

By Tania Barney, a registered Occupational Therapist with the Health and Care Professionals Council (HCPC), UK.
Professional qualifications:  B App Sc (OT), M App Sc (Health Sciences), University of South Australia.

Easy tips for happy holidays

Summer is here and schools are out, and everyone is ready to have a summer holiday. At this time of the year, most people are ready to shut the door on the year that has been. All I have heard over the last few days (from myself as well!) is how people are just hanging in there, and that they are ready to leave the daily rat race in order to relax with family and recharge their batteries for the coming year.

Planning a holiday can be both exciting and stressful. In South Africa, summer holidays are also Christmas holidays, which means that holidays are filled with loads of activities and dedicated to family gatherings. These gatherings are generally noisy, long, filled with loads of food and sugars, and generally with a large number of people.  A quick recipe for a sensory melt-down!

So how do we consider the different sensory thresholds when planning our holidays?

  • Pick and choose your holiday activities wisely and give family members a heads up regarding outings. Prepare them for new situations and talk them through what they could expect. The easiest way to survive the holiday season is to keep everyone in the loop.
  • Visit tourist attractions at quieter times and plan ahead with regards to food if possible.
  • We don’t have to accept every invitation extended to us.
  • Have clear house rules for every place that you go tolearn the rules of the places that you visit, especially if one is travelling overseas, and prepare your family
  • Check-in with your family members at events – before going to an event, decide on a sign or gesture that will indicate that all is not okay. This will help reassure your family that you will know when a break is needed and it also helps to keep behaviour issues in check.
  • Have an escape space – whenever you get to a place, find a spot that will allow for quiet time and a sensory break. Prepare your family for noisy situations, and have a strategy in place if you need to get away from very crowded places. (e.g. markets, beaches, shopping malls, Midnight mass)
  • Keep a sensory toolbox with you – have a small bag of sensory tools that may help avoid a meltdown. Include headphones, sunglasses, healthy snacks, fiddle toys and comfortable clothing.
  • Give small immediate rewards – don’t use gifts as bargaining tools. Instead, give small rewards for working together, doing chores, and being a good sport.
  • Praise children for good behaviour, as this will mean a lot to the child with sensory, learning or attention difficulties.
  • Give yourself a break and take time to relax. Sometimes it is just okay to stay at home or indoors when things get too hectic.

Family gatherings are the essence of Christmas, but sadly they can become very stressful. Remind everyone to keep calm and breathe…

If you want to know whether you are looking forward to or dreading the holidays… your Sensory Matrix™ self-assessment will help you understand why…

Annabella Sequeira holds a BSc (Occupational Therapy) degree from the University of Cape Town, backed by 22 years of experience in both the public and private sectors.  She has extensive practical experience in the area of Sensory Integrative Dysfunction in children and is passionate about empowering others to improve functionality and quality of life.