On the Virtues of Down Time

I burned the candle from both ends for much of my early adulthood, working more than full-time between several part-time jobs while carrying 16 to 24 credit hours per semester with assorted extracurriculars at a school more than hour away from my residence. I’d be up by 7 a.m. and usually didn’t get home until sometimes as late as 2 a.m. And I did this, day in and day out, for years.

When I radically downsized my roster of commitments, it took me months — months — to be able to sit home and not get stressed out over doing nothing. Sometimes I’d catch myself pacing in the living room. I didn’t know how to decompress; more to the point, I didn’t have an objective measure of stress. Those early days set a dangerously high baseline. I tried to fill the gap anyway, mostly with running and karate and trips to the mall to people-watch and playing World of Warcraft until 2 a.m.

Since those early transition days, I’ve more sanely level-set my expectations about stress. I can see the warning signs and have strategies for addressing spikes. Not a big deal. But funny thing — I’m no longer capable of burning from both ends for any extended time. I’ve been doing some contract work for most of February and into March that kept me busy, and I could feel the stress levels rise. Not because the work was too much or too difficult, but because I gave up a big chunk of my normal “down time.” This marked the first time when I really noticed the impact of being persistently busy.

Put differently: I’m happier, healthier and more serene when I can dedicate time to recharging my emotional batteries. Each day, I usually spend 90 minutes or so sitting down with reading materials (either magazines or RSS feeds), a premium cigar and one standard serving of an adult beverage, usually either port or some type of whiskey. And I read and relax and let my mind engage. I’ve accomplished more reading in the last six months than in the prior six years.

I also value the time I can get away on the weekends. At least one weekend each month must be unencumbered, or I start to get crabby.

Sometimes I wonder if the issue is that I’m getting older, or if I’m adjusting to a more mature mindset. I don’t know. All I can say is, life’s too short to spend it pursuing tasks without building in the time to stop and smell the roses.

Grab Bag O’Goodies: Miscellaneous Personal Updates from the First Half of February

Phwew. February has been eventful. This month marks the six-year anniversary of A Mild Voice of Reason. I’ve installed the Disqus system for comment management on this blog. The tool will allow my visitors to leave comments using logins from Disqus, Yahoo, Facebook, Google, Twitter, etc. No personally identifiable information about any user is ever […]

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