healthy schedule

Wellness Wednesday: Time and Goals

We each have goals. What would it be like to accomplish them ? What would it be like to accomplish a lot of them ? Some people do. These are people with good time management. 

It occurred to me that before I discuss exercise on this Wellness Wednesday blog, I should discuss the one thing my patients say they need before they can exercise: more time. We all have one lifetime of time. What matters is how we use it. Everyone knows this, so what is the problem ? 

Most people are not fully aware of how they spend their own time.

They are not as factually familiar with how they spend each hour as the think they are. I have found that everyone thinks they’re busy, and everyone thinks they're active. People are less sure if they are efficient in their day. This is the territory I suggest we explore at this point in the New Year. 

We are talking about time management. Have you ever had a class in this ? Few people have. It seems like it would be a good idea right at the beginning of high school. Or how about right now, in the blog post ? 

Here is your mini class on time management, complete with some handouts and homework. 

  • Obtain a notebook to document this process. 
  • Record your present schedule, down to the hour, for one week. Include everything from housework to Facebook. Wear a watch all week so you will have realistic estimates of time. 
  • Make a list of goals, for the week, month, quarter, year and five years. 
  • Order the goals by priority.
  • Assess your week long log and see where you are misdirecting or wasting your time. 
  • Realign your schedule with your priorities. Include a spot for 30 minutes of exercise 6 days per week. 
  • Record what happens the next week and repeat. 

Now this is a VERY simplified version of a time management class. It is, however, the essence of the process. It only works however, if you are absolutely truthful with yourself about how you spend you day’s time and absolutely truthful about what you really want. 

I hear so much about not “ having enough time” to exercise, or to shop for healthy food, or to prepare healthy meals, that I decided to address it head on. 

For those interested in more, there are really so many great resources on the web, from Lifehack.org, to books by Harvard Business Review. 

Here is a one page handout on the subject. Click on the title below to download. 

"Time Management" from the Stanford Center for Teaching and Learning

For extra credit, here is an awesome self assessment and time management tool from University of Kentucky. Click on the title to download. 

 

"The Successful Person's Guide to Time Management"

This should be be printed, filled out and used. 

Class is dismissed. Homework is due next week! I’d love to hear how you do. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Structure Sunday: What I do to stay healthy

I am 53 and I have lupus. But I am pretty darn healthy, thank goodness. People often ask me what I do to stay healthy. It's really no mystery. So today's structure Sunday is about the structure of my week. 

Sunday- the beginning of my week

  • Breakfast with family
  • Team clean - ( Housecleaning) especially laundry
  • Clean desk, pay bills ( which I have recently mostly automated yay ! ) a big stress reducer
  • Grocery shopping 
  • small scale recreation 
  • longer workout 
  • family dinner 
  • Prep for the workday per usual routine- down to packing lunch and snacks, and picking morning outfit ! ( a stress reducer and time saver ) 

 

Monday -workday

  • The usual routine of am protein drink, midmorning snack, second breakfast, lunch and midafternoon snack. Daytime intake must include one large glass of water, one large bowl of ground green tea, and one small cup of kefir, a probiotic.
  • pm- break from workout 
  • family dinner per usual routine 

Tuesday- workday 

  • usual routine 
  • longer workout 

Wednesday - surgery and chores

  • grocery shopping 
  • shorter workout 
  • entertain if possible 

Thursday workday 

  • longer workout 

Friday - workday 

  • shorter workout 
  • special family dinner
  • evening outing 

Saturday - 

  • family breakfast 
  • longer workout 
  • larger scale recreation 
  • entertain 

 

Everyone thrives on routine, from adults to children.  It gives your system signals of peace and plenty. With a reasonable routine, stress hormones decrease and everything from thinking to healing improves. 

You can also use routine help with taking medications and supplements, and to regulate your sleep schedule. If you are having a tough time meeting your health goals, just build a routine. Routine can make hard things easy. 

People say they do not have the willpower to eat well and exercise regularly. Here's the newsflash: It's not so much a matter of willpower as it is engineering. You simply schedule your healthy habits and stick to the schedule, no questions asked.