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Enviar a email | When A Cuppa Will Do You Good: Brief Breaks & Productivity en General | Por Stepcase el 16-May-2008 |
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There are points when the only thing you can do ? despite desperately wanting to be productive ? is to step back for a few minutes. And while conventional productivity wisdom seems to dictate that you should use those few minutes to get a small task done or get a bit ahead on a future project, there are often situations when the best thing you can do is to sit down for a nice cup of tea (or the relaxing activity of your choice). I picked up the habit a while back and taking those little breaks have actually increased my productivity. Try stopping for a few minutes when?
?You?re Frustrated
If a given project is about to drive you over the edge, you need to step back. Try to get some distance or some insight. But switching over to a new task when you?re already wound up and frustrated just means that your irritation is going to be transferred to your new task. Sure, you may get that little bit of work done and out of the way, but you?re going to continue to be frustrated through that task and on to the next one. Taking even a few minutes can help you decide just why you?re frustrated and what you can do about it ? you may even get a side order of inspiration with your cup of tea and think up a new approach to your problem.
?You?re Feeling Poorly
Trying to push on through your daily tasks when you?re feeling sick can be worth less than you think. If you over exert yourself when you are already tired or sick, you may just wind up needing to redo tasks, rather than getting ahead on what you need to do. If you?re like me, though, the idea of taking a day off or going back to bed just doesn?t seem like an option. But slowing down can make sure that I actually do get things done on a day when I feel pretty bad. Sure, I may not get some smaller tasks done while I?m sipping on my tea, but I can probably work through my most important tasks.
?You?ve Been At It Too Long
We all have different breaking points, but each of us have that point where, if we don?t go and do something different, we?ll go a bit nutty. I learned during the good old days in college that if I wanted to pull an all-nighter, I had to plan to get up and take a walk every hour or so, or I?d get so flat out bored and tired of my project that I would fall asleep on my keyboard. Getting up to make a cup of tea, get a drink or take a quick walk around the office not only gives your brain a chance to refresh itself; it also gives you a chance to stretch and maybe avoid that case of carpal tunnel you?ve been working towards.
?You Have A Short Wait
In any given project, odds are pretty good that you?ll have a short wait here and there: waiting for a graphic to render or an email to arrive or whatever. As a general rule, if I expect that wait to be under five minutes, I refuse to start anything new. Sure, I might need a short break away from the project, but I don?t necessarily want to derail my train of thought to the point that working on something entirely different would entail. Getting up to get a cuppa will keep me from getting overly distracted during those five minutes, but won?t cause me to lose the focus I need to keep working on a project.
?You Reach A Set Interval
After you?ve been working for long enough, you just have to get up and move around a bit. I actually set a timer to go off every twenty minutes to remind me to just stretch. While I don?t think that getting up every twenty minutes just for a cup of tea ? or getting up at all that often ? is ideal, getting up out of your chair on a regular basis is a good idea. You might set a timer for once every few hours or so. Of course, this sort of break is easy to ignore when you hit your stride. I often work through my timer when I?m on a roll. But after working through that timer a time or two, I find that I absolutely have to get up and move. It?s up to you to find an interval that works, as well as a reason to get up ? after all, there are only so many cups of tea a person can drink in a given day. But there are plenty of options: exercise, snacks, even set activities like walking down to pick up your mail can be enough to provide you with a short break.
?You?re Thirsty
Even if you?re almost done with a project, it can be worth it to take care of those nagging bodily needs. You may think you can ignore it just a little bit longer, but any distraction can be enough to decrease the quality of work. It?s rare that you?re so close to done and so close to deadline that you can?t afford a few minutes to get a drink or whatever else needs doing. While I?m all for suffering for one?s art, I don?t think being thirsty quite qualifies.
Thursday Bram is a freelance journalist of over five years experience. She studied Communications at the University of Tulsa and is currently working on her MA in Communication Design. Her work has focused primarily on entrepreneurial topics. More information about Thursday is available at thursdaybram.com. Share This
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Leído 5 veces

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 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, Stepcase Lifehack Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
| Five Productivity Ideas I?m Not Buying (Yet?) | |
The body of work on productivity, life-work balance, and personal achievement sits uncomfortably ? perhaps perilously — close to the genre of “self-help”. There are good ideas out there, but there are also a lot of hacks, qu [..] Leer nota completa |  | Publicado 17-Aug-2007 por Dustin Wax en ProductivityFeaturedmindmapproductivityself helpsuccess Leído 36 veces. Más resultados en  |
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 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
| The Real Trouble with Productivity | | I have a confession: I cringe at the word productivity. Getting things done. Saying that feels like being against democracy or love or Buddha or something, but I feel that much of what passes for productivity is simply ubercybersonic doingness dressed up in happy faces. Organization, accomplishment, measuring effectiveness–all those tools and systems are cool, but what if our doi [..] Leer nota completa |  | Publicado 10-Mar-2008 por Lisa Gates en Productivitypassionvaluevision Leído 8 veces. Más resultados en  |
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 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
| Lifehack Digest for November 21 | |
10 Lesser Known Ways to Increase Productivity
Scott Young writes at PickTheBrain about 7 (I know, the title says 10 — you get 30% off for Black Friday, I think) parts of productivity we don’t think of much, including diet, our working rhythm, and the space we work in.
Tags: productivity strategy design planning diet
Overcoming The Biggest Roadblo [..] Leer nota completa |  | Publicado 22-Nov-2007 por Lifehack Editors en Resourcelinks Leído 15 veces. Más resultados en  |
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| Greeting, welcoming and introducing people in English | | GreetingsFormal- Hello- Good morning- Good afternoon- Good evening- How are you? > Fine, thank you. What about you?- How do you do? = Nice to meet youInformal- Morning / Afternoon / Evening- Hi / What's up? / How is it going?- How are you? > Fine, thanks. And you? > / Great / Not bad- How are you doing?Welcoming people- Come in- Sit down- Make yourself at home- It's good/great/wonderfu [..] Leer nota completa |  | Publicado 22-Apr-2008 por Carlos en General Leído 17 veces. Más resultados en  |
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 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
| Lifehack Digest for December 3 | |
Tackle Any Issue With a List of 100Litemind’s idea about ideas: if you need to come up with ideas, don’t jsut brainstom until you have enough, sit down and come up with 100 ideas. Some will stink, but there’ll be some good ones you wouldn’t have come up with if you hadn’t been pushed.Tags: creativity productivity problemsolving thinking idea [..] Leer nota completa |  | Publicado 04-Dec-2007 por Lifehack Editors en Resourcelinks Leído 20 veces. Más resultados en  |
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 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
| Lifehack Digest for December 4 | |
WrideaThis seems like a good idea: an online “idea manager” for recording and brainstorming ideas, either alone or in collaboration with a group. Functions sort of as a wiki crossed with a todo list manager. Try it out — it’s free!Tags: apps tools productivity collaboration ideas webapps
Quick Steps Toward Working More Efficiently in [..] Leer nota completa |  | Publicado 05-Dec-2007 por Lifehack Editors en Resourcelinks Leído 15 veces. Más resultados en  |
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 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
| Can You Catch Productivity? | |
Like anything, a little influence and encouragement from people can help a lot. Kelly Forrister at DavidCo suggests that, like social ties affecting obesity, productivity could also be affected by the people you’re surrounded with.
[..] Leer nota completa |  | Publicado 22-Aug-2007 por Craig Childs en Productivityproductivity Leído 33 veces. Más resultados en  |
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 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
| Tactics & Strategy: Do you know the difference? |
Attaining true productivity can be an elusive process, and often when I look around at the methods people are using I see two distinct approaches: tactics, like motivation hacks, or overarching strategies, like applying the concept of minimalism to productivity. [..] Leer nota completa |  | Publicado 22-Feb-2008 por Joel Falconer en FeaturedProductivityplanningstrategytactics Leído 8 veces. Más resultados en  |
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 | Life Hack | Blogueros | Personal Development Weblog, lifehack.org Daily digest and pointer on productivity, getting things done and lifehacks |
| Do you REALLY need to get yet more things done? | | Maybe today?s fashion for increasing personal productivity isn?t all it?s cracked up to be
Increasing your personal productivity is the subject matter of a slew of books, magazine articles, and more than a few successful blogs. It?s fashionable, popular, and, most of all, highly [..] Leer nota completa |  | Publicado 21-Feb-2008 por Adrian en Productivitygtdorganizationtime-managementwork-ethic Leído 14 veces. Más resultados en  |
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