Last week was a 21 mini-chocolate bar salute to epic failure.
All right, maybe not epic.
Possibly not even a failure.
Definitely a 21 mini-chocolate bar salute though.
Of which I only ate five, accompanied by a small slice of pumpkin-pecan crumble and three decadent peanut butter fudge drop cookies.
Days when I’m clobbered over the head with a list of to-do items, I wonder how I can fit it into my week, let alone 24 hours.
My job contains a myriad of small jobs that must get done or it throws a spanner in the cogs of the news machine.
Last Monday, a standalone photo was the spanner in my day.
First time in my career I ever came up empty.
It felt like my creative eye had gone blind; I’d tapped out my photographic spirit.
Not the best way to kick off the week.
By Friday, looking at the mounds of laundry, dishes, dust bunnies and grime taunting me from every corner, I thought the weight of responsibility would swamp my “life” raft.
I sat down and listed the things I do in a day. I was exhausted just looking at it.
Forget work – which can challenge my already strained lack-of-organizational skills – the expectations of my life tug my apron strings for attention, begging for a moment or two of my undivided attention every minute of my day.
In fact, I’m not sure I’ve encountered a moment of undivided attention since the children were born.
Honestly, looking at that list I felt as though I was contemplating climbing Mount Everest, in winter, carrying an elephant, blind folded in my flip-flops.
Daunting? Perhaps.
Then it struck me – WHAM! No not the group, the feeling you get when a solution hits you with a swift upper cut, then slaps you for missing the obvious.
It depends on how cleverly you distribute the weight of your backpack with your pachyderm.
I’m a master organizer – not of my day or house, but of backpacks and vehicles.
Packing the car is relaxing for me.
Like assembling a massive circular puzzle of the same shade of blue, I feel a deep sense of triumph when I finally pour the kids in the car with the dog and we get on our way, everything I need within my reach.
I need to pack my life just like I pack the car.
Starting today.
Right now, at home, I’m cooking a wonderful full chicken dinner with potatoes and carrots.
I’ll steam the broccoli when I get home. It’s the first time I’ve used my slow cooker to . . . cook. It’s the most amazing concept, having a machine do my job while I’m out doing my . . . uhm . . . job.
In the office I’m finishing off my blog and about dig into two, possibly three, stories that are in their rough stages while I tune out the chitter-chatter of our jovial newsroom with some Black Keys and Bob Marley.
I have a hard time focusing on a chore at home as well so I’ve enlisted the help of those who are organization masters to keep me on task with this helpful list: http://housekeeping.about.com/od/getorganized/a/organizeplan.htm
Fantastic, I’ll print this out and post it in the room I’m in as a reminder. I’m too disorganized – and thrifty – to laminate it, but a large Ziploc bag and some tape will accomplish the same thing.
I may follow this helpful 11-step list to actually de-clutter the house one room at a time.
Utilizing my baggy magic, I can designate time frames for each job and work to a deadline – the only thing that generally keeps me on task. I enjoy the pressure.
http://lifeorganizers.com/Clutter/The-Organized-Home/11-Easy-Steps-to-Declutter.html
In fact Life Organizer is a great site for clearing up space and time in nearly ever facet of your life. Including your online life.
It’s one click away in any direction to get hints and tips on how to make cleaning fun (Are you serious? FUN? Doubtful, but I’ll give it a go.), getting the entire family involved in pulling their household weight, and even a whole section on wedding organization.
I definitely need all the help I can get on that.
It even addresses my issues at work.
http://lifeorganizers.com/Time-Management/The-Organized-Office-Schedule/Increase-Your-Daily-Productivity.html
Some of these things seem like common sense but sometimes we forget how much of an impact certain workplace situations make on our productivity.
I love our newsroom but the witty banter is like shiny things to my crow-like aural senses, especially at the end of a 10-day week.
So with Led Zeppelin focussing my ears in one direction it leaves the rest of me to get down to business and blog my fingers off.
With four days off looming, I plan on giving some of these suggestions a run for their money and organize the house and my time.
At least start up the slope of my personal Mount Everest. Think of the rewards – literally.
Remember to give yourself a goal and when you reach it, give your self something to mark it.
I hear there’s a shiny new dishwasher that works leaner, meaner and greener, than my hands do elbow deep in the suds, on the peak of Everest.