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Seven Deadly Sins of Work Life Balance
by: Jennifer Jefferies
In the thirteenth century, Dante listed the Seven Deadly Sins on
the pathway to Paradise: Gluttony, lust, greed, envy, pride, anger
and sloth. Now, almost eight hundred years later, people are still
committing these seven sins in Balancing Work and Play. So let me
share with you the Seven Deadly Sins of Balancing Work and Play
... and how to avoid them.
1. Gluttony: Trying to be all things to all people
Dont try to be all things to all people. If you try to please
everybody, you will end up satisfying nobody.
The secret to being successful at balancing life is to allow yourself
to be human and release guilt from your life. Everyone gets wound
up at times, when you notice it happening simply acknowledge where
you are and move back to doing something more balanced. Dont
give yourself a hard time or anything-just keep moving forward.
Success with a balanced life is just like success anywhere else:
You choose your market, find a problem, and provide a superior solution.
If you try to be all things to all people, youre not just
a glutton youre a glutton for punishment.
2. Lust: Falling in love with gimmicks
Focus your time, money and energy on the things that matter, not
just those that catch your eye right now. This doesnt mean
an endless quest for Mr. Right, but it does mean that you dont
have to settle for Mr. Right Now.
When it comes to balancing your life, this means stop buying a
new thing every time you feel stressed or unhappy. Shopping has
become the latest way that people try to make themselves happy.
You keep buying stuff that brings happiness for a very short period
of time and when this wears off youre back at the shops again.
Next time you have this urge, speak to a close friend or colleague
and share how you are feeling, if you just stop for a minute and
acknowledge where you are at it passes. Go for things that really
make you happy like time with good friends compared to short lived
shopping trips for more dust collecting stuff.
3. Greed: Looking for too much too fast
When you first get started living a balanced life, theres
a temptation to do everything at once. But if you chase two horses,
youll catch neither of them. The best way to get started is
to choose one activity that is likely to give you high value, do
that well, and then move on to the next.
Thats not to say that you should only be doing one thing
at a time. But just be sure that everything you do is done well.
Go for quality not quantity.
4. Envy: Copying tactics that dont fit your strategy
A Russian soldier stationed in West Berlin after the Second World
War wandered into an empty house and saw an electric light bulb
for the first time. Fascinated by this magic light-generating globe,
he cut it off with his bayonet and put it in his knapsack so he
could carry around the light with him wherever he went.
The same is true with living a balanced life. Dont just do
what somebody else tells you to do, unless you know why they do
it. If they are successful, what they are doing is just one part
of their strategy. You cant just pick up that one thing, put
it in your knapsack, take it somewhere else and use it to light
up your world.
For example, perhaps you know a person you see as living a balanced
life you get all excited and choose to do the same things he or
she is doing. The only problem is that you have no system to what
you do, you shadow them and copy the superficial parts of their
life and get exhausted doing it. Why, because they are doing the
pieces behind the scenes elements as well, not just the apparent
ones.
By all means, look around to see what others are doing, but dont
just copy their tactics without understanding how and where they
fit your life. Get the whole picture and then implement it as a
system.
5. Pride: Holding on to things that arent working
If what youre doing isnt working, do something else!
I know that that sounds obvious, but it never ceases to amaze me
how often people keep repeating unsuccessful patterns.
If youre running tired all of the time, or dont even
have time to run tired, look at what you are doing. Your lifestyle
is obviously not working for you if it is sucking the life out of
you constantly. Find a system you can use to get what you want out
of life and implement it one step at a time like you would with
any new system in the workplace.
It usually doesnt take much effort to solve these problems.
But the first step is to recognise them, and commit to doing something
about them one step at a time.
6. Anger: Blaming other people for your lack of success
If youre not getting the success you desire, look to yourself
first. Even if it is somebody elses fault, you
could be waiting a long time for them to fix things for you. It
is far better to take responsibility yourself to find a solution.
For example, if you have lost your spark for life and your health
is suffering, you need to look at what you have been doing to get
to that state. You are responsible for what you put in your mouth
each day, for how you treat yourself and for what you get out of
life.
If you are treating your physical and emotional body like a second-class
citizen then that is what you will get back in return. You will
get a body that wont give you the energy for anything. Accept
the responsibility and be healthy now.
7. Sloth: Dragging your feet
Above all, do it now! None of the other advice in this article
will do you any good at all unless you take action.
Its too easy to say Ill go to the gym next week,
or Ill start eating healthy tomorrow, or Ill
fix my office environment after I finish this next project.
Its often easy to take action, but its almost always
easy to not take action. Successful people do the things that unsuccessful
people dont do.
Your success is in your hands its up to you!
About The Author
Jennifer Jefferies is the author of "The 7 Steps to Sanity".
Visit http://www.jenniferjefferies.com/
and get your free e-book "Feed Your Body, Gain a Life".
Life Balancing expert Jennifer Jefferies is one of Australias
best-known authors and speakers and she has a prescription for modern
living. Her powerful message is of work, life and balance
and how to have it all through Seven Steps to Sanity. How health
and wellbeing impact workplace morale and productivity is becoming
an issue for corporations around the world and there is a growing
body of evidence that proves the link between a healthy workforce
and a healthy company bottom line. Organisations are increasingly
? nding that it is not only their employees who bene? t from improved
health and wellbeing. According to Jennifer the equation for businesses
is quite simple: a balanced life = increased job satisfaction =
increased productivity and performance
jennifer@jenniferjefferies.com
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