ArticlesBase.com - Free Articles Directory
Free Online Articles Directory
07.10.2008 Sign In Register Hello Guest
Email:
Password:
Remember Me 
forgot your password?


Do Less And Get More Done

Author: Eric Garner Author Ranking Blue | Posted: 18-12-2005 | Comments: 0 | Views: 202 | Rating:  (51) Article Popularity - Blue (?) Got a Question? Ask.
Sign Up Now!

If you want to be more productive at work, you need to balance the amount of time you spend being active with the amount of time you spend doing nothing. In fact, doing nothing can be the most creative and productive part of your schedule. Here are 7 reasons why.

1. Let Things Happen. One of the reasons why stress is at record levels in all our workplaces is the belief that you must be active all the time for anything to happen. In fact, the contrary is the case. When you remove yourself and trust that things will happen as they should, then, even if we don't always understand how, things will happen at the right time in the right way. As Benjamin Hoff says in "The Tao of Pooh": "It's hard to explain, except by example, but it works. Things just happen in the right way, at the right time. At least they do when you let them, when you work with circumstances instead of saying, "This isn't supposed to be happening this way" and trying hard to make it happen in some other way. If you're in tune with The Way Things Work, then they work the way they need to, no matter what you may think at the time."

2. Use Non-Doing Time To Become More Creative.  All of us possess an amazing machine in our brains known as the creative sub-conscious. This is the source of all our best ideas. Yet, when we are rushing around like headless chickens, we don't allow our sub-conscious brains to come to our rescue. Often we put a lot of busyness into a task only to realize later on that, if we'd stopped and thought about things, we could have found a smarter, quicker, or more productive solution.

3. Stop And Tune In. In his book "Life Tide", writer Lyall Watson records the phenomenon of a group of macata fuscata monkeys stranded on a Japanese island all discovering the right way to prepare food even though they weren't in any obvious form of contact with each other. It was as if there were a collective consciousness telling them what to do. The same thing can happen to human beings. We can sense the times, sniff the wind, and roll with the tides. In this way, we can tune in to what is happening and make the journey free and effortless.

4. Take A Break. Breaks are essential for productive work. Research shows that there is a basic physiological rhythm to our day governed by our automatic and endocrine systems. This is known as the Break - Rest - Activity Cycle and lasts between 90 and 120 minutes. That's why breaks are necessary to give us energy and refresh us.

5. Take Time To Plan. In the West, we prize action over inaction. We, therefore, complete one task and hurry on to the next. In the East, by contrast, non-action is prized as highly as action, if not more. These cultures like to measure progress by more means than just results. They spurn impatience and hurry, knowing that, if you prepare well, a moment eventually arrives when things are ready for implementation and they practically complete themselves. Theologian Martin Luther knew this when he said: "I have so much to do today, I'll need to spend another hour on my knees."

6. Take Time Out. It is when you work in fast-moving environments that you need to remember to take time out. Time out enables you to get away from all the problems that usually clutter up your work and see things more clearly. Microsoft founder, Bill Gates, takes a week out of his schedule every year to disappear somewhere where nobody can reach him. He gets colleagues to put together some material that he's interested in and then just goes away and thinks things through. This habit has made him into one of the richest people on the planet.

7. Meet With Yourself. Just as sufficient planning before action can reduce the time a project takes, so can review after the action. In fact, in repetitive tasks it is vital. Review, or meeting with yourself, enables you to look back and learn. You can see the big picture and put things into some kind of perspective. It also enables you to see the mistakes you made and to consider how you can do things better next time.

Incorporate these 7 habits of non-doing into your time management schedule, and you'll be surprised at just how relaxed, healthy and productive your days become.

Rate this Article: Current: 0 / 5 stars - 0 vote(s).

Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/self-help-articles/do-less-and-get-more-done-9101.html

Print this Article Print article   Email to a Friend Send to friend   Publish this Article on your Website Publish this Article   Send Author Feedback Author feedback  
Eric GarnerAbout the Author:
© Eric Garner, ManageTrainLearn.com

For instant solutions to all your management training needs, visit ManageTrainLearn and download amazing FREE training software. And while you're there, make sure you try out our prize quiz, get your surprise bonus gift, and subscribe to our fortnightly newsletter. Go and get the ManageTrainLearn experience now!
Submitting articles has become one of the most popular means of generating quality backlinks and targeted traffic to your website. Join us today - It's Free!

Article Comments

Comment on this article Comment on this article
Your Name
Your Email:
Comment Body
Enter Validation Code: Captcha


Related Articles

Stress - How Time Management Causes Stress
By: CD Mohatta | 28/07/2008 | Stress Management

The To Do and Did It Lists
By: Jeanie Marshall | 21/09/2006 | Time Management

Is Being Unorganized Hurting You
By: Amanda Young | 25/04/2007 | Business
Business Articles, learn about busines - An organization created with the objective of making a profit from the sale of goods or services.

How to Stop Time
By: Annett Tate | 04/02/2006 | Health

Spice Up Your Time
By: Amanda Young | 25/04/2007 | Business
Business Articles, learn about busines - An organization created with the objective of making a profit from the sale of goods or services.

5 Sure-fire Tips To Manage Your Time Better, In 7 Days Or Less!
By: Abhishek Agarwal | 13/10/2007 | Time Management


By: | 31/12/1969 |


By: | 31/12/1969 |

Got a Question? Ask.

Ask the community a question about this article:

Frequently Asked Questions

Telepathy
By: anonymus | 12-09-2008
Hi Abhishek, do u often communicate with anyone through ur mind (like wireless communication ...just like talking on mobile but without actual mobile phone) for eg. with ur partner.

Site:genforum.genealogy.com Farmersville, Union ...
By: Beverly Edwards | 08-09-2008
site:genforum.genealogy.com Farmersville, Union Parrish, Louisiana     I am researching The James M. Edwards family.  He was born in Farmerville, Union, Louisianna  in 1852.  Where would I go to find vital statistic as to who his parents were?   Beverly Edwards

My previous husband supposedly father another ...
By: Johanna | 07-09-2008
My previous husband supposedly father another child before we met and married.  Now since he has passes away, I wonder if maybe my daughter might have a 1/2 brother.  How would I go about searching birth records?  I don't know the mothers name.  But I'm pretty sure of around the time the child may have been born.  Is there a way to search birth records with only the fathers name?

I wont to work from home stuffing envelopes but ...
By: natasha | 06-09-2008
I wont to work from home stuffing envelopes but Idont have NO MONEY to get start with can you HELP ME

Activities such as writing or translating can ...
By: drabsv | 04-09-2008
Activities such as writing or translating can become tedious if they are not combined with some "side activity" like talking to somebody, listening to music, stretching your body, etc. What is the best, the most productive combination, though, you can think of?

Time of sundown
By: Lisi | 03-09-2008
What time is sundown on September 4, 2008 in Illinois? Answer to: Lisi442@aol.com

Q&A Powered by:
Powered by Yedda 

Latest Self Help Articles

Mastering Your Mind Power: Stop Allowing Adversity to Bully You
By: Harold L Lowe | 06/10/2008
Stop focusing on the adversity. Instead, focus on what you desire. By presenting to your mind an end result that you desire and choosing to use PMA (a positive mental attitude) as allegorical binoculars, your desire takes center stage in your mind.

How to Improve Balance in Your Life
By: J Seymour | 06/10/2008
Self-hypnosis can make you improve balance in life by helping you remove the habit of worrying.

Shame: How to Overcome Shame With Help From Self Hypnosis
By: J Seymour | 06/10/2008
The feelings of shame can be overcome with the help of self-hypnosis that can be used to overcome anxiety and change the working of the subconscious mind.

How to Stop Over Analysing
By: J Seymour | 06/10/2008
Hypnosis is a useful tool that help you stop over analyzing by changing the way your subconscious mind works.

Help With Weight Loss: How Self Hypnosis Can Help You
By: J Seymour | 06/10/2008
Hypnosis is a useful tool for pain management along with conventional form of treatments as it helps you to block the sensations that lead to such bouts of pain.

Help With Weight Loss: How Self Hypnosis Can Help You
By: J Seymour | 06/10/2008
You can achieve your objectives of weight loss by using the techniques of self-hypnosis to change your thought patterns and the way your subconscious mind works.

Help for Bulimia: How Self Hypnosis Can Help You
By: J Seymour | 06/10/2008
Bulimia is a serious disorder that can be effectively cured by using tools of self-hypnosis to change the feelings and perceptions that cause this problem.

The Culture of Thinking in Coaching, Pat 2
By: Reza Hossein Borr | 06/10/2008
As the purpose of the coaching is to empower the client, the process of empowering can only begin with creating a culture of thinking in the client which would turn into a habit that can be repeated automatically again and again and when it is repeated more, it gains more momentum and secures more competence in production of thoughts.

More from Eric Garner

Travolta's Law
By: Eric Garner | 09/10/2007 | Coaching
Take the advice of one of Hollywood's superstars and see that business or management disaster in a different light.

Find Out What's In Your Customer's Mind
By: Eric Garner | 13/02/2006 | Business
If you want to stay close to your customer's heart and mind, you need to know what's in it and on it. Find out with these 6 customer feedback techniques.

Make Life A Daring-Do Adventure
By: Eric Garner | 13/02/2006 | Self Help
Helen Keller said that life was nothing if not a daring-do adventure. This article shows you how to manage the risks in your life, rather than succomb to foolhardiness and chance.

The True Meaning of Success
By: Eric Garner | 13/02/2006 | Motivational
Has our modern celebrity-obsessed culture warped our notion of "success"? Read this article to discover a gentler, truer and more enduring notion of what "success" is all about.

The Gratitude Attitude
By: Eric Garner | 18/12/2005 | Motivational
Gratefulness is a powerful force in the world. When we show gratitude every day for all the good things that we so often take for granted, then we can really claim to have the Gratitude Attitude.

Teambuilding: The Most Rewarding Act Of Leadership
By: Eric Garner | 18/12/2005 | Management
When you turn a group of self-interested individuals into a winning team, success is practically guaranteed. This article will take you on that journey.

Bullseye! How To Land On Every Goal You Set
By: Eric Garner | 02/10/2005 | Self Help
If you've ever wondered why you never seem to achieve the goals you set yourself, use these 7 principles of goal-setting and turn a dead score into a championship-winning score!

Article Categories






Give Feedback

Sign up for our email newsletter

Receive updates, enter your email below