Where Have The Hours Gone
Posted by Cindy Hobbs on July 25th, 2007
Have you ever thought what you would do with an hour? Living in a busy hectic world, we often hear comments about how life would be much easier if only there were a couple of extra hours to spare each day. Let me ask you though, what would you use those extra hours for? Do you really need them? Don't you think 24 hours every day is enough...if we use them properly?
Let's break up these 24 hours into the 3 generally accepted categories:
8 hours of sleep
8 hours of work
8 hours 'free' time
When was the last time you actually slept 8 hours, or used 8 hours of 'free' time with your family and friends, or started reading that new book you bought or the course you've been promising yourself to begin for so long?
"There's just not enough time! I have to work all day and then when I get home I'm just so tired. I eat dinner with my family then I 'relax' in front of the TV." (Here you can easily catch up with those 8 hours!).
When was the last time you asked your spouse/partner, or children, how they are? I mean REALLY ask them and LISTEN to what they say.
Could the whole dilemma be nothing more than a question of priority? Let's borrow one of those hours from our day. One solitary hour. Now, what could we use these 60 minutes for (apart from watching yet another re-run of your favorite TV show)?
Let's try to put things in perspective. How many weeks each year do you go on vacation? How many hours every month do you use on personal development (physical AND mental)? How many minutes each day are you TOGETHER with your family? If you really want more time for yourself and the things you want in your life - think about this...
If you use an extra 30 minutes a day with your family, in one year from now you will have given them more quality time than you use in over one whole month of full-time work. Or, if you allow yourself just one hour every day to read or study something you would like to learn more about - how much more knowledge do you think you will have gained about that subject after using the equivalent of over 2 month's full-time work studying over the next year?
No, we cannot make time, but we can certainly take it.
Each and every day is your responsibility to choose what you want to use your 24 hours for.
Remember, 60 minutes a day, over a 12-month period, is the same amount of time as working 40 hours a week- without breaks - for 9 weeks!
Ask yourself again, is it really so difficult to take one hour a day for what you love most?
About The Author :
Cathy Warschaw, Director of the Warschaw Learning Institute provides an online Dental Office Management Program, Dental Insurance, HIPAA, CDPMA and CDA prep courses. For more information go to
http://www.WarschawLearningInstitute.com (c)2007
Associated News Items
Cosby to visit academically at-risk youngsters (The News Journal)
Comedian Bill Cosby is making a Delaware encore today. He will visit teens at Sarah Pyle Academy in Wilmington as part of his national Save Our Children campaign to help troubled youths to help themselves. ...more
Local GED program for teenage moms spreading the word (WKYC Cleveland)
CLEVELAND -- Tucked away inside Old Stone Church on Cleveland's Public Square is a program that teaches young moms how to get their education and parenting skills. ...more
Omni Financial Services: The Wall Street Analyst Forum Presentation Transcript (Seeking Alpha via Yahoo! Finance)
TRANSCRIPT SPONSOR Omni Financial Services, Inc The Wall Street Analyst Forum August 16, 2007 9:50 am ET Executives Stephen Klein - Chairman and CEO Gerry Scott - President, Wall Street Analyst Forum Presentation Gerry Scott Good morning ladies and gentlemen. ...more
Troubled teens are: (Ralston Recorder)
Last Saturday, five teens spent the morning pulling weeds, planting flowers, laying mulch, picking up trash and watering the new landscaping at Granville Villa Assisted Living in La Vista. ...more
Study: Same-sex couples just as good, if not better, at parenting (Vancouver Province)
OTTAWA -- Parenting by same-sex families is just as good -- if not slightly advantageous -- for children when compared to heterosexual families, a Justice Department study has concluded. ...more

Deutsch
Español
Français
Italiano
Portuguese
Nederlands
Ελληνικά
日本語
한국어
Российская
漢語








