Prosperity with Less Stress

Homepage  | Add to Favorites

 

Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Featured Articles

Pesticides In Food A Major Health Hazard
Copyright 2004 by http://www.organicgreens.us and Loring Windblad. This article may be freely copied and used on other web sites only if it is copied complete with all links and text intact and unchanged except for minor improvements such as...



Crucial v Not Crucial
We all have "too much to do". True? Sure 'nuf. And that says a lot of good things about you. That you have "too much to do" suggests that a lot of people have entrusted much confidence in you. I mean, people who are drifting about early each...

Learning Healthy Habits From Our Children
There are many important things that we need to teach children as they grow—but they have many natural behaviors that we shouldn’t try to change. In fact, we could learn a few things from kids! Here are some important lessons: Eat when you are...


5 Tips to Stress-Guard Your Family
Joe and Emily live in Southern California with their three young children. Both work and must commute 2 hours daily on busy freeways, often not getting home until 7:30 PM, exhausted and depleted. Stressed, they have little patience for the...

 
Google
CUT STRESS THROUGH EFFICIENCIES

CUT STRESS THROUGH EFFICIENCIES

On a daily basis, many are inundated with tasks. The list of things to do never seems to be completed. Over time, this continual stress can lead to feeling burnt out. One fairly simple way to make things a little less stressful is finding efficiencies in your daily tasks. Initially, this entails more planning, but in the long run, it will definitely pay off.

There may be ways for you to examine your schedule and tasks to find ways of doing things smarter. As the old cliché goes, ‘it’s better to work smarter than harder’.

Here are some basic tips that will help you become more efficient and thereby reducing your workload and stress levels.

Plan, Plan, Plan! Each week, spend time planning out your week. First create a list of all that needs to get done during the week. Once you have the list, look for groups of things that can be done at the same time or location. For example if you have identified that this week you have to: drop of clothes at the dry cleaners, go to the post office, pick up groceries for the week, go to the dentist on Monday afternoon and pick up a birthday present for a friend.

Normally, the above would be done on 4 or 5 separate trips. Now the dentist is right next to a large grocery store which has a post office in it. So Monday, you plan to go to the dentist, grocery store and post office. The dry cleaners is just up the road from a department store, so you can drop your clothes off and then go to the store to pick up a present. From 5 trips,


you are now down to 2 trips saving significant travel time.

Bulk is better. Sometimes a task can be done on a larger scale once instead of repeated several times on different occasions. For example, you are the family chef responsible for making family meals. Every Tuesday night, the family has chili. By time you come home from work and spend an hour in traffic, making chili may not seem like the most desirable task. What if the chili were made once a month in a large pot and frozen. Now all you have to do is throw it in the microwave.

Set a time limit. In general when you have to accomplish a task, if there is no time limit set, the time it takes for the task to be completed tends to drag on. If a time limit is set, you are more likely to complete the task within the allotted time. Try it! You may also find that the time it takes for you to complete a task will vary to the limit you set for it. That is, the longer you set the time limit, the longer it will take you to complete the task. Set reasonable time limits as the whole reason for this exercise is to try to limit stress. The purpose of setting a time limit is to keep you focused on the task at hand in order to get it completed in a timely efficient manner.

These tips are quite simple, but when used can help you to become more efficient and less stressed.

About the author:

Richard Gary is a stress management specialist. You can find his and other free stress management articles at Stopstress123.com



 


Visit these sites in the Information Organizers Network
Government Funding | Expressions of Gratitude | Government Grants for Youth | Repair My Credit Now | Government Grants for Individuals | Cars for Non Profits | Federal Grant Money | Prosperous Spirit | Govt Grants News | Civic Engagement Grant News | Environment Funders | Grants for the Arts | Entrepreneur and Home Business | Business Home Income Online Opportunity | Grants Civic Engagement | 1000 Popular Baby Names | Best Baby Names | 100 Best Small Business Ideas | Best Small Businesses to Start | Cool and Unique Baby Names | Educational Funding | Home Improvement Grants | Building a Mind of Prosperity | Federal Government Grants | Small Buinsess Grants | Small Business Grants for Women | Boys Bike | firsttimehomebuyers.com | Sitemap | Privacy Policy
Edited by:Michael Saunders

©2011 Information Organizers, LLC