As web workers, we often tout how flexible we are, how we’re in charge of our own lives and businesses, and how no one has a hold on us. We work on what we want, when we want, and with whom we want. We are our own bosses and motivators. Nobody can hold us down.
I don’t know about you, but when I traded in my corporate chains, I shackled on a bunch of new ones. While I’ll say that I am free in a lot of new ways, I’m also a slave to a lot of new things. I’ve realized this recently, and I’m actively trying to combat these issues. I chose this lifestyle so I could live on my own terms, not on a new set of terms that are defined for me by circumstance.
I’m a slave to my email.
Anyone who’s web working can relate when I say that I get a ton of email everyday. I get email from clients, potential clients, blog readers, my peers, friends, family, influential people that I follow, you name it. By the end of the week, I feel just so bogged down by email, and my inbox is a nightmare.
Not only that, but I check my email way too much. I’m afraid I’m going to miss something.
This is an issue I needed to solve immediately. So I spent some time going through my Gmail inboxes, organizing labels and filters, getting rid of things I don’t need, finishing up tasks that were sitting there, etc. I created an email system that will keep me on track.
Also, I’ve committed to checking my email only four times during the day: when I wake up, around noon, in the late afternoon/early evening time, and once in the evening hours. That may still seem like a lot, but it’s actually just a fraction of the time I spent on email previously. When I check my email, I immediately categorize, respond and complete a task, delete, or flag for follow-up each email. Nothing sits in my inbox anymore.
I’m a slave to social media.
I could spend hours upon hours on social media fostering relationships. But, sometimes it can be a real time-suck and it can keep me distracted from all the other things I need to accomplish.
So I’ve committed to being active for an hour a day on social media. This hour includes the time I spend carrying out blog promotion strategies, time spent on following and responding, and time spent on initiating new contacts. I’m also making better use of automation tools like Tweetlater (to schedule tweets in the future, not to send pesky auto-DMs).
I still randomly use social media throughout the day when I have something to say or contribute. But forcing myself to really make good use of that one hour a day has helped me not feel so overwhelmed and like it’s just one more thing on my to-do list.
Speaking of to-do lists…
I’m a slave to my to-do list.
I create the most ridiculously long to-do lists. There’s no way I could possibly do everything I have set out to do each day. I set myself up for failure in this way, and then I spend more hours working until I can cross off every last thing on my list.
So I’ve been diligent about making my to-do lists realistic. And I’m finding that at the end of the day I’m able to unwind more easily and feel accomplished and confident.
So that’s me. Every web worker has their unique struggles and things that are slaves to.
What about you? What aspect of your web working lifestyle might you be a slave to? And what do you do to keep it in check?
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