Monday, July 27, 2020
In Defense of Downtime Outside of the Workplace - Workology
In Defense of Downtime Outside of the Workplace Ahhh, vacation. In about two weeks Iâll be headed to backwoods Illinois by way of St. Louis to spend 7 glorious days with friends and family. I know it still several days away, but Iâm already calling friends and family for weather updates and planning my wardrobe. As Iâm digging through my closet pulling out my must have comfy pants, I stopped for a moment and thought â" âwhat about my laptop?â Oh no. I plan on taking my laptop on vacation. I already have coverage planned. One of my colleagues is going to take care of my clients, and I have my calendar blocked. Itâs early enough for me to insure that I wonât miss anything important the week Iâm gone. I wonât be scheduling any interviews or hiring manager meetings. I donât have to work. So why am I freaking out at the thought of being disconnected? We live in such a hyper-connected world. Facebook status updates, Foursquare check-ins, Instagram selfies, is there anything we donât share? And thatâs just on the personal side. I get work email on my phone and every time I see that little button with a number next to it, I have to check. I just canât seem to stay away. My boss has a great 24 hour rule â" you have twenty-four whole hours before a response to an email is required. If only I could live by that. As I plan my vacation, Iâm setting a goal for myself. NO WORK. I know I wonât be able to stop myself from getting on to social media. I will simply HAVE to tweet a picture of my kids at Wyatt Earpâs birthplace, which apparently is a short drive from my auntâs farm. No one will believe I actually cleaned a barn or milked a cow if I donât put it on Facebook. But can I stay away from work? What if I leave my laptop behindâ¦. No iPad, turn off my work email. Can I actually do it? I donât know, but Iâm sure going to give it a try. Iâm looking forward to giving my kids my undivided attention. Iâm hoping Iâll remember to stop and smell the roses before snapping a picture of them. I feel reasonably certain that my job will still be here when I get back. .ai-rotate {position: relative;} .ai-rotate-hidden {visibility: hidden;} .ai-rotate-hidden-2 {position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; width: 100%; height: 100%;} .ai-list-data, .ai-ip-data, .ai-fallback, .ai-list-block {visibility: hidden; position: absolute; width: 50%; height: 1px; z-index: -9999;} When I extend an offer to a candidate, I always linger a bit over benefits, specifically time off. I break down our vacation policy, which is pretty great, and remind our soon-to-be employees the importance of downtime. I make them promise not to forget to take advantage of our generous time off plan. So why is it so hard for ME to do the same? In my 15 years as a recruiter, I could probably count on one hand the number of actual vacations Iâve really taken. In other words, not many. I couldnât even take a proper maternity leave with my last two children without checking in more often than necessary. This year, I hope will be different. Iâm going to leave my laptop at home, disable my email on my phone and enlist my friends and family to keep me focused on what matters. Them.
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